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"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

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"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

We encourage you to visit our new site. Please don't leave your comments here because this site is obsolete. You may also like to update your RSS feeds or Google Friend Connect (Follow the Blog) to the new location. Thank you.


"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

We encourage you to visit our new site. Please don't leave your comments here because this site is obsolete. You may also like to update your RSS feeds or Google Friend Connect (Follow the Blog) to the new location. Thank you.



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Monday, 30 June 2008

My choice this week: 30 June to 6 July 2008

Taliban knocking at our door... by Khurshid Nadeem






Ghaat – Nazir Naji


Our political class – Irshad Haqqani


5 July 1977 – Asghar Nadeem Syed


PPP, PML-N and vultures – Aftab Iqbal


From July to July: The military rule in Pakistan – Abbas Ather


Lal Masjid anniversary

After one year, the Lal Masjid has taken on the identity of a national icon which the state destroyed and now must pay for. The head of the seminary, Maulana Abdul Aziz, who escaped from the premises in a burqa while the others were dying inside, is now a hero awaiting his “restoration” along with the judges. His lawyer sits with other anti-Musharraf discussants on TV and recommends death for President Musharraf. The entire nation has performed a volte face on what transpired last year.

When the Supreme Court was on the warpath it ordered restoration of the two seminaries — Jamia Faridia and Hafsa — before their handover to the people who had begun applying their law to Islamabad, picking up people and punishing them to end what they called “munkiraat”. Then followed a form of general “repentance”. Maulana Fazlur Rehman was taken to task by the federation of the seminaries for opposing the Lal Masjid clerics. He then went and met Maulana Aziz. So did the lawyers’ leader Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan. Now the PMLN has Lal Masjid on its list of the “rectifications” it will make when it comes to power. And the PPP will probably trade on it. How unfortunate. (Daily Times, 4 July).

Turkish scene


THE political scene in
Turkey has entered a critical stage, with a key ruling expected soon on a constitutional petition seeking a ban on Prime Minister Recep Erdogan’s party. The ruling AKP received a blow the other day when the constitutional court scrapped a newly-made law that lifted the ban on headscarves in educational institutions. Now the issue is the very survival of a party which is in its second consecutive term in office. The petition before the constitutional court accuses the AKP of trying to undermine Turkey’s secularism — a feeling shared strongly by the powerful military, the judiciary and the academia. An even more disturbing development has been the arrest of 21 ultranationalists, including two former generals, all of whom have been accused of planning a series of terrorist attacks to invite an army coup.

More than eight decades after Kemal Ataturk established a secular republic, Turkey has still not been able to develop a stable political system. Military interventions have been frequent. During his two tenures as prime minister, Erdogan has managed to tame the generals and turned the once-powerful National Security Council into an advisory body. It is under his leadership that Turkey has been able to have a government that is not a patchwork of mutually hostile coalition parties. Erdogan has done a lot to rid the Islamists of Necmettin Erbekan’s baggage. He pledged support to secularism and finally has the satisfaction of seeing the European Union start entry talks. However, more than the Cyprus issue and the stiff EU entry conditions it is Turkey’s internal scene that has become cause for concern. Last year’s soft ‘e-coup’ by the generals sent alarm bells ringing.

If the AKP is banned and Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul are barred from politics for five years, the internal scene will undergo a radical change, the consequences of which are difficult to predict. A decision against the AKP will lead to an early general election, and the results could again be a weak coalition government that could be exposed to pressures from the military, lack the will to address the Cyprus and EU entry questions and carry out reforms to stick to the Copenhagen criteria. It is to be noted that each time Erbekan’s party was banned it re-emerged under a new name. Banning a political party is no solution to Turkey’s eternal quest for stability based on a secular system.
(Dawn, 5 July).

How people see the war

By Khadim Hussain

SINCE Pakistan’s military operations began in 2002, the menace of terrorism and religious militancy has further deteriorated the situation in the length and breadth of the Pashtun belt, engulfing the very existence of the hapless Pashtuns.

Almost all seven agencies of Fata, Tank, Swat, Mardan and now Peshawar are reeling under the Taliban code of Salafi Islam (Wahabism). This is a modern phenomenon that started in the early eighties after the Soviet-American war in Afghanistan, though the influence of ‘Wahabism’ was present in some parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan even before the so-called jihad in Afghanistan.

The people in high conflict zones of the Pashtun belt have remained the victims of militancy and militarism and have been living in a state of utter confusion, fear and terror. No war has ever been won without the support of the common people and since 2002, the military operations in Fata and settled districts of NWFP have alienated the people who are deeply frustrated with state institutions. The people of Swat, Waziristan, Kurram and now Khyber Agency had initially welcomed the security forces but later on either became neutral or switched sides to the obscurantist forces as the operations seemed ill organised, badly coordinated and off the target.

The military started bombing Mamdheria in Swat after Fazlullah’s militia vacated their ‘markaz’. The organisational structure of the militia remained intact, but what was observed by the people, who had initially welcomed the soldiers with sweets in Matta, was the fact that the bombings were mostly on schools and private buildings. The common man in Swat does not understand why the military did not proceed to the hills of Peochar to dislodge the training camp of the militia which had by then accommodated trainers from Waziristan and other parts of Fata and Afghanistan.

Swat and Waziristan witnessed a series of target killings after the operation was formally called off by the military and the movement of the people remained severely hampered by the many checkposts across the Valley. Those who had in any way helped the security forces were killed and slaughtered. The killing of Bakht Baidar Khan, Asfandyar Amir Zeb, Abdul Kabir and scores of others occurred when the military had formally announced their victory over the militants. Anybody having any influence and opinion was either killed or forced to migrate from upper Swat after the security forces claimed a decisive victory against the militants.

Then the NWFP government signed the peace deal in May 2008 with Fazlullah’s militia which gave a golden opportunity to the militants to regroup and reorganise and get funding and weapons from sources still unknown to the well-known intelligence services of Pakistan. Almost the same scenario happened in Waziristan when the military struck a deal with Baitullah in South Waziristan.

The Fazlullah militia is now stronger and amply funded. It can threaten the administration of the state whenever it likes. They were recently able to strike from three different parts of the Swat valley simultaneously — Malam Jabba, where they destroyed the PTDC motel and the chairlift, Barikot where they set a school on fire and Sar Sinai where they burnt a police ‘chowki’ besides killing four people in Matta.

The provincial government now claims that the pact with the militants is intact while Fazlullah’s spokesman, Muslim Khan, has said in a statement that they have suspended talks with the government on the orders of Baitullah. One can observe the same pattern of perception amongst the people of Bajaur, Mohmand, Khyber and Peshawar; that the government and security forces are not serious about eliminating the spectre of a totally unacceptable code imposed by the Taliban on the people of high conflict zones.

The perception of the people in conflict-torn zones also brings another pertinent point to mind: they believe that despite sophisticated modern technology, the security forces usually target areas where the innocent and non-combatant suffer the most. The non-combatants in Waziristan, Swat and now Khyber Agency have incurred ten times more damage than the militants. It has been reported that the people in South Waziristan had built their own schools but when the military was leaving the area, they demolished all the schools, except a few where Baitullah has established his camps.

The same has just happened in Khyber Agency where security forces have destroyed houses that belonged to ordinary people. The people in the Agency are also of the opinion that security forces have started an operation against the wrong people. Lashkar-i-Islam and Ansar-ul-Islam are sectarian organisations at best and harbour no ambitions to establish their writ outside their sphere of influence. The people of high conflict areas also believe that the government has never paid any heed to their aspirations. They hold the justice system, colonial administrative structures and lack of economic initiatives responsible for all the mayhem around them. The people believe that lack of initiatives to empower them and lack of development are the primary reasons for this turmoil in the Pashtun belt.

Ill-coordinated operations have also created suspicions regarding the purpose of these actions. They maintain that it is not possible for any non-state organisation to survive the onslaught of state organisations if the state is serious about its endeavour, inferring that state institutions may be complicit in the activities of these non-state organisations. One can observe that the police force, Frontier Constabulary and other paramilitary forces are demoralised to the point of inaction. Constables deployed at checkposts may claim that their hands are tied and that they are mere scapegoats in this war against the militants, their training, remuneration and organisational structure plays a pivotal role in their state of disheartenment.

Common people feel that the state is unwilling to carry out serious operations; it targets non-combatants, allows target killings, enters into peace deals with militants but remains fairly apathetic about the well being of the people
. (Dawn, 5 July).


The federation of Pakistan – Abbas Ather


The USA's veto in favour of Musharraf – Asadullah Ghalib


‘Khyber military action shows failure to rein in terrorists’

* Boston Globe suggests if Peshawar can be infested by Taliban, world has reason to worry about stability of nuclear Pakistan

By Khalid Hasan

WASHINGTON: Action taken in the Khyber Agency implies that the coalition government is losing ground to extremists and its efforts to negotiate a truce agreement with Pakistani Taliban groups have failed to rein in, or even constrain, the various jihadist bands in the region, writes Boston Globe in an editorial.

If Peshawar, a major city, can be infested even temporarily by the Pakistani Taliban, there is reason to worry about the long-term stability of this nuclear-armed state, according to the newspaper. The most immediate danger, it believes, for Americans comes from the sanctuary that Al Qaeda enjoys in the tribal areas of Pakistan. US intelligence officials estimate there are now about 2,000 recruits being trained at small Al Qaeda camps located in the inaccessible mountains and valleys of Waziristan. If there is to be another terrorist attack on America on the order of September 11, it is likely to originate from those camps, it is feared.

Of the two “nasty realities” the next American president will need to confront, writes Boston Globe, one is that Pakistan, despite having a secular civilian government elected in free and fair balloting, which seems unable to overcome, or even resist, the swelling power of its Islamist militias. Al Qaeda has been able to recreate a new version of the safe haven it lost when US forces toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. The second nasty reality is that the Bush administration has been losing its proclaimed war on terrorism and it will be up to the next president to develop a coherent long-term strategy for coping with Al Qaeda and affiliated terrorist groups.

“[US President] Bush’s successor will need to reconsider the nature of the terrorist threat, starting with an understanding that the jihadist movement is aimed primarily at overthrowing regimes in the Muslim world which it deems insufficiently Islamic. In this internal war within the world of Islam, America has been targeted as the ‘far power’ propping up governments such as those in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco. The next US administration will need to lower the American profile in this war. It will have to cooperate more extensively, and quietly, with intelligence services and law enforcement agencies in the Arab world, central Asia, and Europe,” writes the Boston-based daily.

The newspaper points out that President Bush’s inflating of the terrorist threat to the scale of a third world war has helped Islamist ideologues propagate the notion that the US is waging a war against Islam. To win a war of ideas with violent Islamists, the next president must counter this dangerous propaganda by resisting any temptation to conduct military operations in Pakistan that can be depicted as an American occupation of yet one more Muslim country. (Daily Times, 4July).


China's economy and the USA – Nayyar Zaidi


Chief Justice LHC Syed Zahid Hussain – Ajmal Niazi

Musharraf and the USA – Abbas Ather

Nawaz Sharif and the USA – Asadullah Ghalib


Bara action is much ado about nothing

Security situation in NWFP exaggerated

Arif Yousafzai

PESHAWAR: Taliban at the gate, Taliban are taking over Peshawar, militants have tightened noose around provincial capital, Peshawar could fall to followers of Mulla Umer and Osama and Islamists could establish its rule in NWFP by taking control of Peshawar.

These are some of the phrases appearing in both print and electronic media these days aimed at paving way for another full-fledged military operation on the bleeding Pakhtoon soil.

Advisor to Prime Minister on Interior Rehman Malik on Sunday told media outside the Balahisar Fort in the provincial capital that Peshawar had been saved from the evil shadow of what he called as militants and enemies of peace. If Peshawar has been made safe now, one hopes that the troops deployed in Bara would be withdrawn and sent back to barracks so that the innocent tribesmen could take a sigh of relief.

The Bara operation which in actual terms is one-sided action from the security forces was launched not to crush the criminal gangs in Khyber Agency because most of these gangs had already been either killed or forced out of the agency by Amir Lashkar-e-Islam Haji Mangal Bagh. The people of NWFP in general and Peshawar in particular are aware of the situation in Bara Tehsil before and after Mangal Bagh took over its administration.

The law and order situation in Bara was so bad before Lashkar-e-Islam took over that a non-local who would visit the Khyber Agency was lucky to escape kidnapping and come back safe to Peshawar from the agency. However, unsafe Bara Tehsil became so safe that even a stranger could move freely in the entire Bara Tehsil and Teerah Valley after Lashkar-e-Islam established its rule there.

No one could dispute the fact that Taliban established complete peace in the war-shattered Afghanistan during their five-year in rule. In the same way Haji Mangal Bagh and his predecessor Mufti Munir Shakir, with the help of their fighting force Lashkar-e-Islam, restored complete peace in the once lawless Bara Tehsil.

It is regrettable that Pakistani media and Pakistani journalists working for foreign media, particularly those hailing from NWFP, indulged in professional dishonesty associating every incident of violence with the Taliban and other Islamic forces just to feed the foreign media.

It has become a common practice for some known anchors sitting in TV studios in Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi to pass baseless comments on the situation in Peshawar and its adjoining areas. Is it not strange that an anchor while doing a programme on the situation in Peshawar runs footage in the background of Swat, South Waziristan and Bajaur? This is my personal experience with my colleagues in other parts of the country that they even do not know the distance between Peshawar, Swat, Tank, Waziristan and Bajaur Agency but while doing a show on TV they are invited as guests to deliver lengthy speeches on law and order situation in the NWFP and tribal areas.

I will appeal to media to stop playing with the lives of people of the NWFP and tribal areas. Stop telecasting a totally baseless picture of the Pakhtoon society. Stop associating each and every incident with Taliban. Stop inviting foreign forces, especially America, to bomb innocent people of the NWFP like it has been doing in Afghanistan in the name of search for Osama bin Laden and in Iraq in the name of Weapons of Mass Destruction. Stop maligning Muslims and Pakhtoons and branding them as terrorists. Stop becoming a part, intentionally or inadvertently, of the great game of disintegration of Pakistan.

Those who live in Peshawar know well how safe this city is. It is quite painful when we receive telephone calls from media-influenced people from other cities, asking us as to why we were living in a city which is falling to Taliban and terrorists. I also got telephone calls from friends in Bara who asked me why we were showing highly exaggerated picture to the world about the ongoing action in their area. Those who have visited Bara during the past five days might have seen the routine business going on in the area but the picture media shows to the world is entirely different, giving an impression as if a major operation is currently underway in Khyber Agency. This operation is a matter of few days. It will be over soon and Mangal Bagh will come back to Bara to take control of his seat. Government will announce compensation for the nine people killed during the operation and houses and compounds demolished and finally the game will be over.

However, the military action could turn out to be bloody if America demanded more dead bodies and collateral damage.

Bazaars in Peshawar like other parts of the country remain open till late at night and people enjoy going to parks and having dinners in hotels. The playgrounds of the city present the same look as they present in other cities like Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi.

It is on record that Haji Mangal Bagh has recovered dozens of kids and youths from the possession of the kidnappers and handed them over to their relatives following the failure of government security agencies to do so.

What kind of operation is being conducted in Bara? Who the security forces are fighting in Bara? No a single bullet has so far been fired by the Islamic militia. Haji Mangal Bagh has met this correspondent several times and he has always told that he would stop militancy if government ensures protection to helpless people.

Mangal Bagh has never talked about attack on security forces as he always says that army and paramilitary forces are like brothers to him. This is what Mangal Bagh has been demonstrating during the past five days is that his men have not fired a single bullet on the paramilitary forces though forces are destroying their compounds, seminaries and houses.

It is also on record that the people of Peshawar have started contacting groups like Taliban and Lashkar-e-Islam for help against the criminal gangs who used to tease people and picked up kids, boys and even women from the posh Peshawar areas.

Why facts are being neglected so blatantly? I might disagree with dozens of steps of Taliban and Lashkar-e-Islam but in my close association with these groups I have never found them against Pakistan and common people. Their sentiments against America and other enemies of Islam are also so clear and they don not feel hesitation to express such feelings publicly.

It is commonly said that Peshawar is being captured by Taliban but the question arises as to how it is possible without public support. What is the need of thousands of soldiers, paramilitary forces, 11 corps and thousands of police force in Peshawar if Taliban move forward to capture the provincial capital so easily? Taliban can do so only with public support which they are gaining day by day. Though secret reports suggest that Peshawar could fall to Taliban in eight months but how the city would fall to the militants is the real question which no one is ready to answer.

It will not be wrong to say that the basic aim of the operation in Bara was to offer a gift of few more dead bodies of innocent people and demolished houses to the visiting Assistant American secretary of State Richard Boucher to show him that Islamabad is actively engaged in the so-called war against terrorism and to justify the embezzlement of $140 million package, US has recently sanctioned for Pakistan for fighting terror war. (The Post, 3 July).

Azad Kashmir: women versus jihadis

Nearly 50 women travelled 80 km from Athmuqam to an army camp in the Neelum Valley in Azad Kashmir on Tuesday to stage a peaceful protest against the “growing activities of some militant groups” which they feared could harm the truce along the Line of Control (LoC). Their demand was that the military authorities stop the militants from operating in the border areas. They feared that the jihadi militants would cause grave violations of the LoC, after which the Indians would resort to indiscriminate bombing of their houses.

The reply given to the ladies by the assistant commissioner, Neelum Valley, was inadequate. He said that the Indians were merely test-firing on their side of the LoC and that the ladies had just become scared unnecessarily. The women had actually complained of jihadi activity. It may be recalled that the Neelum valley was a scene of death and destruction caused by artillery fire for nearly 14 years until Pakistan and India agreed a ceasefire in Kashmir in November 2003, the year the same women had staged their first rally. There was a time when our army allowed the jihadis to commit crimes on both sides of the LoC. But those days are gone. If they are allowed to repeat their activities again, Pakistan’s policy on Kashmir would be confirmed to the world as being duplicitous. (Daily Times, 3 July).

America and Nawaz Sharif

The US Assistant Secretary of State for
South and Central Asian Affairs, Mr Richard Boucher, met the PMLN leader Mr Nawaz Sharif at the latter’s residence a couple of days ago and discussed matters that clarify American policy on Pakistan as well as Washington’s view of Mr Sharif’s brand of politics. As one of Pakistan’s most popular leaders, whose party happens to be a part of the ruling coalition “from the outside”, Mr Sharif has firmly expressed his position on US policy towards Pakistan, especially as relates to the fate of President Pervez Musharraf and the war on terror. Therefore this can be considered an important meeting.

According to reports leaked by the PMLN, Mr Boucher asked Mr Sharif to avoid a move to impeach President Pervez Musharraf, and allow the President to use his own discretion to leave since his stay in power had become irrelevant. The ongoing “operation” in Khyber Agency also came under discussion and the matter of the sacked judges was apparently touched upon too. Mr Boucher dwelt on the political situation in the region. Mr Sharif responded by deeming President Musharraf’s impeachment essential to the survival of democracy. When he asserted that restoration of the judiciary was at the top of his party’s agenda, Mr Boucher said the sooner the judges’ issue was resolved the better it would be for everyone.

It is being said that Mr Boucher’s visit was aimed at introducing flexibility into the stance of Mr Sharif and his party, as well as to impress upon him that America was willing to spend big money on the economic development of Pakistan but was hampered in its plans by the rising trend of terrorism and the bad law and order situation in Pakistan. To this Mr Sharif produced the stock answer that his party and his supporters reiterate all the time: “Eradication of terrorism and the maintenance of law and order are Pakistan’s domestic concerns and external forces, including the US, should refrain from intervening”.

Pakistan has a political situation in which different groups are trying to force their agenda on the democratic set-up. Everyone has the right to protest, but the argument favoured most by the anti-Musharraf forces — and anti-American ones too — is that the February 2008 elections had “a mandate requiring the removal of President Musharraf”. It is also expected from the PPP that it should offer itself as a burnt offering on the altar of this “presumed” mandate and the deposed judges who will throw Musharraf out upon restoration as well as revive corruption cases against the PPP leader, Mr Asif Ali Zardari.

Mr Sharif knows — as per his adviser and ex-ambassador Mr Tariq Fatemi — that the Americans had planned the return of Ms Benazir Bhutto, armed with an NRO, to Pakistan to rule in tandem with PMLQ, and not the PMLN, after a free and fair general election. So while he likes the idea of flaunting his party as an anti-American force in step with the sentiments of most Pakistanis, he would like the Americans to note his popular PMLN as the party to reckon with when formulating policy on Pakistan. For this, he has put together a lot of support among the masses and civil society of Pakistan.

The PMLN stance, however, has a domestic consequence. The PPP cannot afford to become the sacrificial goat simply to satisfy the PMLN’s passion for the judiciary as a political tool to achieve its objectives. Reference to the so-called “mandate” is simply bad politics. It would have been better had the PMLN and its allies among the lawyers and the APDM indicated a way to get rid of President Musharraf after making sure that the process would not hurt the PPP. So the PPP says the President should quit on his own before it can put together the numbers required in parliament to impeach him.

As for the “subordination” of terrorism to the issue of the judiciary, the world is not with Mr Sharif and his allies. The state has lost whatever writ it had in nearly half the territory of the country. The terrorists with whom Mr Sharif recommends “talks” keep on repeating the vow that they will continue to raid across the Durand Line. The world looks at FATA as the training ground of international groups preparing terrorist attacks in the United States and the European Union. This “world” is composed of those states that absorb all of our exports and can bail us out economically. The PPP tends to agree. And the PPP can’t be toppled from power constitutionally, unless an aggressive dharna is able make it run away and leave the feast of power to the PMLN.

It would, therefore, be wiser for the PMLN to remain allied to the PPP and take advantage from this partnership to rule efficiently in Punjab and guide the country out of its economic troubles. The national economy, alas, sees no value in “principles”, and recommends endless “opportunism” to follow policies beneficial to it. It is finally pragmatism and not passion on the basis of which Pakistan will survive. (Daiy Times, 3 July).


FATA is not about eating muesli —Ejaz Haider

Counter-insurgency is murky business; very murky in fact. It needs those who can get their hands dirty so the rest of us, the liberals, can eat muesli, show good manners and talk about probity

If it is accepted, as it should be, that effective media usage in today’s world is essential for winning public acceptance of a policy, especially one which relies on use of force or the threat of its use, then the government, in its current effort in Khyber Agency, has failed — again. Consider.

Knives are out and questions being asked: who is responsible for this operation; what and who is being targeted; how would this be effective in putting down the militants; who are these militants — Taliban or local, religio-sectarian groups; is it a charade played out for the benefit of Washington in the backdrop of increasing pressure on Pakistan to do something and the visit here of Richard Boucher, assistant secretary of state for south and central Asia?

Stories from the ground and analyses make various allegations: Frontier Corps and army troops have gone in after an understanding with the local groups; they have gone into an area which was quiet anyway; leaders of lashkars in Khyber are agencies’ boys; once troops pull out, the groups will rebuild their assets; the buildings destroyed by the troops were empty; et cetera.

These allegations do not add up to any coherent criticism and, in most cases, are at odds with each other. But that does not take away from the fact that they are lethal for whatever policy is being pursued.

Here’s an example: one major criticism against the previous government has been that it was fighting America’s war and it used force instead of dialoguing with the tribesmen (let’s not quibble about dialogue with whom, how and through what medium). Let’s now suppose that the current government decided, on the basis of this criticism, to do the following: select an area with the least degree of difficulty; talk to local lashkar commanders and organise an operation; time it to sync with the visit here of Mr Boucher.

If we suppose all this — and this is hypothetical — and juxtapose it with the criticism with which we began this exercise, should the critics not applaud the government for being very smart on the following counts: it has adopted a policy which has brought into harmony two conflicting requirements — making the US, international community and Afghanistan happy without having to kill its own people and getting own troops killed.

No. It is still being criticised.

If it acts in ‘reality’, it is criticised for killing its own people and getting its troops killed; if it plays out a charade, it is pooh-poohed and critics smirk because not a bullet is being fired, no soldiers have fallen, and no real culprits are being arrested (leave aside the fact that in this conflict critics upon critics have tried to tell us that there is only one culprit — the USA — while the Pashtun are reacting to its presence).

Note: This argument itself would necessitate, given international pressure on Pakistan to fight its own people and the presumed injustice of that demand, to play this game and far from faulting the government for doing so, critics should absolutely hail it.

That the government is getting the short end of the stick no matter what it does shows it needs to get its act together.

Let’s now move from suppositions to some facts.

Khyber Agency, far from being a quiet place, has been posing much trouble to Islamabad.

This is what Kathy Gannon of AP reported on May 20 under the caption, “Attacks on Khyber trucking threaten US supply line”:

“Thieves, feuding tribesmen and Taliban militants are creating chaos along the main Pakistan-Afghanistan highway, threatening a vital supply line for US and NATO forces.

“Abductions and arson attacks on the hundreds of cargo trucks plying the switchback road through the Khyber Pass have become commonplace this year. Many of the trucks carry fuel and other material for foreign troops based in Afghanistan.

“US and NATO officials play down their losses in these arid mountains of north-western Pakistan — even though the local arms bazaar offers US-made assault rifles and Beretta pistols, and the alliance is negotiating to open routes through other countries.”

Tankers were being blown up and Pakistan’s envoy to Kabul was kidnapped by criminal gangs in the Agency who then sold him to the Taliban. The situation was exacerbated by sectarian feuding between Lashkar-e Islami of Mangal Bagh Afridi and Pir Saifur Rehman’s Ansar-ul Islam which is many years old but has flared up again in the Tirah Valley. Bagh’s men recently kidnapped several Christians from Peshawar and also tried to kidnap the son of Amir Muqam, a PMLQ leader.

If this is not reason enough to move in and show force I don’t know what is. Equally, to expect that some of these characters will not return to their bad habits or that if they do the operation would have been a failure betrays little knowledge of the area and how tribes and groups operate.

Khyber Agency is bounded in the north and north-west by Mohmand Agency, in the south and south-east by Orakzai Agency and in the west by Afghanistan. Taliban groups have been infiltrating into the Agency to temporarily link up with criminal and other gangs there. Indeed, in a joint effort US-Pakistan intelligence operatives paid Haji Namdar to lure in Taliban groups which he did and then betrayed them. Namdar is salafi and heads an organisation called Amr bil Ma’roof wa nahi Anil Munkar. He makes the usual rhetoric but can be relied upon to deliver if paid well (Syed Saleem Shahzad, “Taliban bitten by a snake in the grass”; Asia Times Online, April 26).

Now we have Maulvi Nazir and Gul Bahadur, two Wazirs from South and North Waziristan Agencies, being put up against Baitullah Mehsud. This is a legitimate counter-insurgency effort and is far more effective than employing troops to attack insurgents from outside. The efficacy of this can be judged from Mehsud’s reported initiative to distribute pamphlets in Miranshah pledging never to fight against Gul Bahadur (see Daily Times, “Mehsud challenged by new militant bloc”; July 2). Earlier, Nazir was used to throw out Uzbeks from the area.

The point is that counter-insurgency operations, which rely heavily on effective intelligence, are not about dealing with angels. One rogue is used to put down another and some concessions are given for controlled activity to one in order to take out the other. This is not the stuff a squeamish liberal stomach can take (Ejaz Haider, “Eroding insurgency from the inside”, Daily Times, June 28).

There is always a downside to this approach; sometimes the rogue one is relying on and playing against another gets out of control. That’s a risk one has to take. When CIA was dealing with Manuel Noriega, the latter was also linked to Cuba and running drugs. But Noriega was useful because he was prepared to provide Contra training facilities to CIA. Examples abound.

Counter-insurgency is murky business; very murky in fact. The situation in FATA requires multiple approaches and tactics even as there is only one strategic objective: bringing the area under control. This will require a running effort, not a one-off operation that can provide us the final solution.

FATA needs those who can get their hands dirty so the rest of us, the liberals, can eat muesli, show good manners and talk about probity.


Jamaat Islami and the 'Afghan Jihad' – Irshad Ahmed Haqqani


Pervez Musharraf – Nazir Naji


PML(N)'s ambiguous policy on terrorism – Asadullah Ghalib


Unfortunate opposition to ‘action’ in Bara

The PMLN and the JUI(S) have opposed the Bara Operation — or ‘action’ as the government would have us believe — because they were not “consulted” before the operation was undertaken. The third coalition partner, the ruling ANP in the NWFP, says it was consulted in two meetings that took place in Peshawar but insists that Peshawar is not “under siege” from the Bara warlord, Mangal Bagh. It apparently has no opinion on the Bara Operation because “Khyber is outside the jurisdiction of the NWFP government”.

The PMLN view was expressed by an outraged Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan in the National Assembly. It was elaborated by its leader from Peshawar, Mr Iqbal Zafar Jhagra, on TV when he said that apart from the fact that his party was kept out of the loop it had always opposed military operation against Pakistan’s “own people”. He insisted that the only way to deal with the situation in the Tribal Areas was through the “political process” (whatever that means), negotiation and peace agreements.

As for the position of the JUI(S), it has always been well known. It represents not so much Islam as the Pakhtun population living in the Tribal Areas and Balochistan. Its leader Maulana Ghafur Haideri has repeated the plaint that his party was not consulted. He went on to say that military action would be counter-productive and his party would not support it. But will the JUI(S) leave the coalition on this issue? No. Much the same response can be expected from the PMLN. Mr Jhagra made it clear that his party would not abandon the coalition. He must however be conscious of the fact that his party’s status in the coalition is different from that of the other partners who are also a part of the government. By getting out of the government, however, the PMLN has obtained the freedom to openly disagree with decisions taken by the prime minister and his cabinet.

The ANP and the JUI(S) have taken positions that are likely to encourage the building up of opposition to the operation among the Pakhtun. Indirectly, the ANP has opted out of the Islamabad policy on the Taliban, by defending its “peace deals” and by denying that the settled areas are under threat or that Peshawar is under siege from the terrorists. This ambivalence can only be understood in light of the ANP’s restricted electorate among the Pakhtun. As opposed to the policy of moulding Pakhtun opinion, it has unfortunately preferred to defer to a collective mind already formed by the religious parties and the Taliban propaganda on the real “intention” of the operation.

The result is that the PPP will have to face up to the backlash that is going to come from the general public who support the views of the PMLN, and from the Pakhtun hinterland. In the coming days, we may expect the TV channels to reflect this “consensus” with the kind of emphasis expected from the “process of repetition” inherent in competition. But the objective fact is that the operation had become unavoidable. And it is no excuse that it should not have been undertaken because it was not thought of three years ago when the warlords of Khyber first came on the scene.

Pakistan’s best known modern physicist Dr Pervez Hoodbhoy has reflected on the “confusion” in Pakistan over the violent events taking place these days. He marvels at the way we ignore Pakistanis kidnapped and killed by the warlords and our violent reaction to the NATO-ISAF forces on the Mohmand border with Afghanistan: “Had the killers been the Taliban, this would have been a non-event...Compare the response to Gora Prai with the near silence about the recent kidnapping and slaughter by Baitullah Mehsud’s fighters of 28 men near Tank, some of whom were shot and others had their throats cut. Even this pales before the hundred or more attacks by suicide bombers over the last year that made bloody carnage of soldiers and officers, devastated peace jirgas and public rallies, and killed hundreds praying in mosques and at funerals”.

Pakistan is in deeper trouble than it thinks. Considering that the top popular concern is the “judges’ restoration”, over which there is no solution in sight, it is unfortunate that we continue to ignore the fact that our economy can only survive if the world helps us. Eminent Pakistani economist Mr Shahid Javed Burki thinks that Pakistan should not return to the IMF because the Fund will impose “stabilisation” and ignore growth pledges because it doesn’t believe that Pakistan can pull it off. He recommends approaching the “donors” for help. The problem is that all the “donors” want Pakistan to take action against the warlords. (Daily Times, 2 July).

Beyond Bara

MONDAY’S kidnapping of 30 paramilitary troops in Kurram Agency — who were subsequently released — confirms, yet again, the enormity of the task ahead. If the military machine cannot protect its own men, how does it intend taming the militants and offering citizens an enduring sense of security? The state may be making its presence felt in Khyber Agency’s Bara area, which after all is right outside Peshawar, but it is all too clear that pro-Taliban militants still call the shots in the less accessible areas of the tribal belt. The Bara operation’s place in the overall scheme of things is also unclear. Is it simply a side issue or part of a larger strategy for establishing the writ of the state wherever it is challenged? The signs are that it may be a one-off move with limited objectives in mind. Indeed, the operation could be deemed a success if the main road to Afghanistan is secured, for the benefit of travellers as well as movement of goods, and if kidnappers operating out of Khyber Agency are brought under a measure of control. Still there is no knowing whether such security gains, if they are indeed achieved, can be sustained over time. Many believe that once the troops pull back, Mangal Bagh’s Lashkar-i-Islam and other militant outfits will return to Bara just as easily as they left the area last week. If that happens, we will be back to square one. As it is the conspiracy theorists are having a field day, with claims abounding that the ongoing operation is just a show staged to appease those who have been demanding action against militants.

In any case the likes of Mangal Bagh and Haji Namdar, leader of Amr Bil Maroof wa Nahi Anil Munkir, are mere irritants compared to Baitullah Mehsud of South Waziristan and Swat’s Fazlullah. True, they have their nuisance value but they are hardly major players in the Taliban game plan. In fact, motivated as they are less by ideology and more by the rewards of criminal activity, Mangal Bagh and Haji Namdar are not even Taliban in the political sense. Their strength too is limited vis-à-vis the state, which is perhaps one of the reasons why the outlaws put up little or no resistance in Bara. In stark contrast, the Tehrik-i-Taliban is a force to be reckoned with, if not a veritable army. The root of the problem lies not in Bara but in places like Swat, Kurram and South Waziristan. The fight against militancy, irrespective of the form it ultimately takes, must begin there. Success will elude us so long as such havens exist for those bent on destabilising our country, providing refuge to foreign sympathisers and helping insurgents across the border.
(Daily Dawn, 2 July).


Benazir Bhutto and Pervez Musharraf – Irshad Ahmed Haqqani


Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Combodia – Nazir Naji


Amin Fahim versus Zardari – Asadullah Ghalib


Uzbeks in the Tribal Areas

Talking to journalists in Lahore, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani stated that “foreign elements hailing from Central Asian Republics (CAR) are disturbing peace in the Tribal Areas and they are behind the current unrest and spike in violence in the tribal belt”. He was referring to around 2,000 Uzbek warriors belonging to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) who are allegedly spread around in the Tribal Areas of Pakistan. They moved into Pakistan from Afghanistan after the US bombardment of 2001 and formed a part of the “multinational” force that accompanied Al Qaeda as it fled across the Tora Bora mountain range into the tribal areas of Pakistan.

First reports about them and others like the Arabs and Chechens were dismissed as false by the MMA government in the NWFP at the time which said that the “foreigners” were actually the mujahideen who had come here to join the jihad against the Soviet Union and had remained here after marrying into the local Pakhtuns. Most observers in Pakistan agreed with this version and all news about the “foreigners” were labelled “plants” organised by an allegedly pro-US government. But the fact was that commanders in Waziristan like Nek Muhammad looked after the Uzbeks under the tutelage of Al Qaeda and deliberately spread the falsehood that there was no “foreign” presence in the Tribal Areas.

The IMU was led by Qari Tahir Yuldashev whose position about jihad was close to that of Al Qaeda’s second-in-command, Aiman Al Zawahiri. He believed that jihad should first target not the US but those “hypocrite Muslims” who support the US. The Uzbeks soon became known for their cruelty and disregard for local Pakhtun culture in Waziristan. This led last year to a cleavage within the Al Qaeda power in the region. One pro-Al Qaeda commander Maulvi Nazir fell out with the Uzbeks and mounted a bloody operation against them. Today his organisation is under attack from Baitullah Mehsud, which means that the Uzbeks are in the ascendant as followers of Al Qaeda.

The Uzbeks were seen by Pakistani journalists when they came to Swat as a part of the Taliban force in the wake of the storming of Lal Masjid in Islamabad in 2007. They stood out because of their savage conduct among the innocent people of Swat. They were a part of the faction that beheaded local people and placed their headless corpses in the streets. They were partly masked, seemed to look racially different and did not speak because they did not know the local language. Later, news trickled in about training camps established especially for the training of Uzbeks in the Tribal Areas.

The IMU targets Pakistan as compensation for Al Qaeda’s support to IMU’s activities in Uzbekistan. The training camps in Waziristan prepare terrorist squads that stage attacks in Tashkent against the ruling elite there. The Uzbekistan government has also formed its Afghan policy in response to Al Qaeda “plans” for Uzbekistan. Even as the Taliban were conducting their war around Mazar-e-Sharif in the late 1990s, Uzbekistan was in the process of strengthening what later became the Northern Alliance. Pakistan, at that time pursuing the doctrine of “strategic depth” in Afghanistan, was at cross-purposes with Uzbekistan, which was then also backed by Turkey.

Tashkent knows that Uzbek killers are being trained in Waziristan. Tahir Yuldashev is actually running two campaigns for Al Qaeda. One, to bring down the government of Pakistan and replace it with a caliphate supported by Al Qaeda; two, to bring down the government of President Karimov in Tashkent. The camps are thus training two sets of terrorists: Pakistanis from such organisations as Jaish-e-Muhammad and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and Uzbeks that keep trickling in from Uzbekistan who are meant to return and create trouble in their homeland. Their three routes are internationally known: they reach Waziristan by travelling through Kazakhstan, through Azerbaijan and through Iran.

There are Chechens in the Tribal Areas too. They came in with Al Qaeda but “fresh” Chechens from the Russian Federation also keep coming in. The troubled province there is Dagestan where the armed rebels, mostly Chechens, are not having much success against the government. With Uighurs of Chinese Sinkiang added to the number, Waziristan will therefore decide the international move against Pakistan in reaction to its “cross-border” raids into Afghanistan. As a reaction, then, we can be sure that intervention or pre-emptive strikes in the Tribal Areas, violating the sovereignty of Pakistan, will be supported by most of Afghanistan’s neighbours including Russia and India. The game is set for a blazing row across borders. (Daily Times, 1 July).

The Taliban challenge

THE operation against the militants in the Khyber Agency raises questions that are germane to a successful culmination of the war against the Taliban. One question concerns what appears to be the ambivalent attitude of officialdom toward the militants. Conversely, the Taliban are absolutely clear about their war aims. After the army action began they have scrapped the previous deals and suspended the talks. Baitullah Mehsud has even threatened attacks in ‘Punjab and Sindh’. This clarity is missing on the government side. There are several parties involved in the crackdown: the federal government has ordered it, the actual operation is being conducted by the paramilitary forces under the command of the army, and the provincial government is a stakeholder as well considering that some of the operation is in its territorial jurisdiction and the now defunct deal in Swat was negotiated by the rulers in Peshawar. Is the coordination among all sides adequate? And do they see eye to eye on the issue? It is time the ANP-led government came out with a clear policy it deems best in the given situation. If the federal government is the key decision maker — one presumes that the army is taking the cue from Islamabad — it should take the NWFP government on board. The Taliban’s decision to suspend negotiations also calls for a clear-cut response and the authorities should not fudge the issue.

This is also the time for an open debate on the ‘war on terror’ in the national and provincial assemblies, so that we know exactly who stands where. The operation that is on now is a continuation of the anti-terrorist operations that have been carried out in the past and will continue into the future. For that reason it must have a national consensus behind it. A civilian government is in power, and obviously the ultimate responsibility rests with the PPP-led coalition. But given Pakistan’s history and the army’s preponderant role in times of crisis the need for the civilian administration to define its policy in clear terms could not have been more urgent.

The challenge to Pakistan is immense. The economic crisis, especially food inflation, is no less important than the Taliban’s creeping advance. Our success or failure will depend on how as a nation we respond to a challenge that is a threat to our traditional way of life. Regrettably, the opposition thinks fighting the Taliban and terrorists is the government’s responsibility. That is where it is wrong. Today’s opposition could be in power tomorrow, and for that reason it is incumbent on it to take a long-term view of the political scene instead of focusing all its attention on party-specific goals. The same holds good for every section of civil society which will be affected by this crisis — that is if it already has not been.
(Dawn, 1 July).

Anti-Americanism & Taliban

By Pervez Hoodbhoy

THE recent killing of eleven Pakistani soldiers at Gora Prai by American and Nato forces across the border in Afghanistan unleashed an amazing storm.

Prime Minister Gilani declared, “We will take a stand for sovereignty, integrity and self-respect.” The military announced defiantly, “We reserve the right to protect our citizens and soldiers against aggression,” while Army chief, Gen Pervez Ashfaq Kayani, called the attack ‘cowardly’. The dead became ‘shaheeds’ and large numbers of people turned up to pray at their funerals.

But had the killers been the Taliban, this would have been a non-event. The storm we saw was more about cause than consequence. Protecting the sovereignty of the state, self-respect, citizens and soldiers against aggression, and the lives of Pakistani soldiers, suddenly all acquired value because the killers were American and Nato troops.

Compare the response to Gora Prai with the near silence about the recent kidnapping and slaughter by Baitullah Mehsud’s fighters of 28 men near Tank, some of whom were shot and others had their throats cut. Even this pales before the hundred or more attacks by suicide bombers over the last year that made bloody carnage of soldiers and officers, devastated peace jirgas and public rallies, and killed hundreds praying in mosques and at funerals.

These murders were largely ignored or, when noted, simply shrugged off. The very different reactions to the casualties of American and Nato violence, compared to those inflicted by the Taliban, reflect a desperate confusion about what is happening in Pakistan and how to respond.

Some newspaper and television commentators want Pakistan to withdraw from the American-led war on Al Qaeda and the Taliban, to stop US fuel and ammunition supplies into Afghanistan, and hit hard against Afghan troops when provoked. One far-right commentator even urges turning our guns against the Americans and Nato, darkly hinting that Pakistan is a nuclear power.

There is, of course, reason for people in Pakistan and across the world to feel negatively about America. In pursuit of its self-interest, wealth and security, the United States has for decades waged illegal wars, bribed, bullied and overthrown governments, supported tyrants, undermined movements for progressive change, and now feels free to kidnap, torture, imprison, and kill anywhere in the world with impunity. All this, while talking about supporting democracy and human rights.

Even Americans — or at least the fair-minded ones among them — admit that there is a genuine problem. A June 2008 report of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs entitled The Decline in America’s Reputation: Why? concluded that contemporary anti-Americanism stemmed from “the perception that the proclaimed American values of democracy, human rights, tolerance, and the rule of law have been selectively ignored by successive administrations when American security or economic considerations are in play”.

American hypocrisy has played into the hands of Islamic militants. They have been vigorously promoting the notion that this is a bipolar conflict of Islam, which they claim to represent, versus imperialism. Many Pakistanis, who desperately want someone to stand up to the Americans, buy into this.

This is a fatal mistake. The militants are using America as a smokescreen for their real agenda. Created by poverty, a war-culture, and the macabre manipulations of Pakistan’s intelligence services, the militants want more than just to fight an aggressor from across the oceans. Their goal is to establish their writ over that of the Pakistani state. For this, they have been attacking and killing people in Pakistan through the 1990s, well before 9/11. Remember also that the 4,000-plus victims of jihad in Pakistan over the last year have been Muslims with no connection at all to America. In fact, the Taliban are waging an armed struggle to remake society. They will keep fighting this war even if America were to miraculously evaporate into space.

A Taliban victory would transport us into the darkest of dark ages. These fanatics dream of transforming the country into a religious state where they will be the law. They stone women to death, cut off limbs, kill doctors for administering polio shots, force girl-children into burqa, threaten beard-shaving barbers with death, blow up girls schools at a current average of two per week, forbid music, punish musicians, destroy 2000-year statues. Even flying kites is a life-threatening sin.

The Taliban agenda has no place for social justice and economic development. There is silence from Taliban leaders about poverty, and the need to create jobs for the unemployed, building homes, providing education, land reform, or doing away with feudalism and tribalism. They see no need for worldly things like roads, hospitals and infrastructure.

If the militants of Pakistan ever win it is clear what our future will be like. Education, bad as it is today, would at best be replaced by the mind-numbing indoctrination of the madressahs whose gift to society would be an army of suicide bombers. In a society policed by vice-and-virtue squads, music, art, drama, and cultural expressions would disappear. Pakistan would re-tribalise and resemble a cross between Fata and Saudi Arabia (minus the oil).

Pakistanis tolerate these narrow-minded, unforgiving men because they claim to fight for Islam. But the Baitullahs and Fazlullahs know nothing of the diversity, and creative richness of Muslims, whether today or in the past. Intellectual freedom led to science, architecture, medicine, arts and crafts, and literature that were the hallmark of Islamic civilisation in its golden age. They grew because of an open-minded, tolerant, cosmopolitan, and multi-cultural character. Caliphs, such as Haroon-al-Rashid and Al-Mamoun, brought together scholars of diverse faiths and helped establish a flourishing culture. Today’s self-declared amir-ul-momineen, like Mullah Omar, would gladly behead great Islamic scholars like Ibn Sina and Al-Razi for heresy and burn their books.

Pakistan must find the will to fight the Taliban. The state, at both the national and provincial level, must assert its responsibility to protect life and law rather than simply make deals. State functionaries, and even the khasadars, have disappeared from much of the tribal areas. Pakistan is an Islamic state falling into anarchy and chaos, being rapidly destroyed from within by those who claim to fight for Islam.

Pakistanis must not be deceived. This is no clash of civilisations. To the Americans, Pakistan is an instrument to be used for their strategic ends. It is necessary and possible to say no. But the Taliban seek to capture and bind the soul and future of Pakistan in the dark prison fashioned by their ignorance. As they now set their sights on Peshawar and beyond, they must be resisted by all possible means, including adequate military force.
(Dawn, 1 July).

The NWFP operation – Hamid Mir


Taliban knocking at our door – Khurshid Nadeem


Those who are criticising Musharraf today…. Hasan Nisar


Action in Khyber, reaction in FATA

Paramilitary forces, whose personnel were freely held for ransom by warlord Mangal Bagh, have gone into the Khyber Agency in the neighbourhood of Peshawar and destroyed the warlord’s house and made his “hundred-thousand strong” army flee from its stronghold. What started three years ago and swelled into a near autonomous state is finally being challenged by the state of Pakistan. It will be adjudged to be a late operation by historians and blame will be apportioned to President Pervez Musharraf during whose watch the problem arose and the civilian rulers of the day who woke up late.



Warlord Mangal Bagh has fled to Tirah, the high altitude valley that Pakistan once proudly called a tribal no-man’s land. He became the ruler of Khyber after killing those who resisted him. He got his income by imposing heavy fines on the local inhabitants for petty neglect of religious pieties and began recruiting his army. The syndrome that surfaced in Khyber is the same as that which appeared in South Waziristan and Swat: intimidation followed by “empowerment” of those abandoned by the state of Pakistan as soldiers and suicide-bombers of “Islam”.

When his “government” became too big for Khyber’s capacity to generate revenues to pay for it, Mangal Bagh descended on Peshawar, cherry-picking rich parties in borderline Hayatabad for extortion, then threatening the rich of Peshawar into paying him big cash. The snowballing of his business of death gave him the charisma he needed. As he killed innocent people in the Agency, people owing allegiance to his “Islamic order” increased by the day in the NWFP and in other parts of the country. He began courting the TV channels when he saw that the rest of Pakistan too was ready for the plucking.

The whole thing was tiresomely old hat. A hundred years ago a water-carrier by the name of Batcha Saqao appeared in Afghanistan, holding aloft the banner of “Islam”, and actually toppled the throne in Kabul to establish his rule there. The only difference today is that in Pakistan, 20 years of jihad, allowed by the state itself, has softened it for adventurists. The sacrifice made by Pakistan for jihad was not spiritual but political: an unwise abdication from its internal sovereignty. The Jihad brought Al Qaeda to Pakistan as the generals foolishly sought “strategic depth” in Afghanistan.

The warlords of the Tribal Areas gain sustenance from the umbrella control of Al Qaeda which can supplement the income of anyone who has exhausted his capacity to live off the retreating authority of the state and the helplessness of the citizens abandoned by the state. According to one Islamabad observer, the who’s who of Al Qaeda surrogates of the state can be listed like this: “South Waziristan now belongs to Baitullah Mehsud; Maulvi Faqir Muhammad controls Bajaur; Mangal Bagh and Haji Namdar rule Khyber; Commander Umar Khalid is the boss of Mohmand”.

How much has the state of Pakistan retreated since 2001 and what is the extent of the terrain the Pakistan army now has to win back? In all, 20,000 square kilometres. We have to leave out Balochistan for now or we will stray from the topic in hand. There are other more lethal “losses” to consider, however. What all these Al Qaeda warlords — who call themselves the Taliban — know may not be a part of our consciousness. But they know that they have conquered the minds of many Pakistanis through their methods of intimidation.

If there is action in Khyber, there is bound to be predictable reaction from Al Qaeda too. This has come from Baitullah Mehsud. He has suspended all peace talks with the army and declared that he will attack Sindh and Punjab. The opposition politicians will cringe. They will have to decide whether to support the government in this action or hang on to the reprieve they won earlier this year by dismissing the war in the Tribal Areas as “not our war” and by focusing on the lawyers’ movement where they even swore to lay down their lives for the sake of “democracy” in Pakistan.

Under the circumstances, the response of different groups of people will be important. Will the politicians and the TV channels disapprove of the military operation and expect that when Baitullah Mehsud strikes in Punjab he will let them off the hook because of their “neutrality”? Will the basis of this disapproval be their interpretation of the operation that the Americans have imposed another war on Pakistan and the PPP government has succumbed to it and is now guilty of killing innocent people? If so, that would be a tragedy of the highest order.

The army knows the pattern from its memory of the Lal Masjid Operation last year. First there is a public demand for “doing something” against a public flouting of state authority, then there is the moral reneging on it, then the operation is made grounds for removing the government in power. The army this time has clearly got a public fiat from the government to launch the operation. If we don’t want Pakistan to go down, we should fully support the operation all the way. (Daily Times, 30 June)

ANP must wake up!

An elder of the Awami National Party (ANP) in Swat, Mr Muhammad Afzal Khan, has stated that the Peshawar government had lost its writ in Swat. He said on Saturday that the militants continued to be as strongly in control as they were before May 21 when the ANP government made its “peace deal” with warlord Fazlullah. Two tehsils of Swat were never vacated by the outlaws and they continued to swoop down and attack any place they thought they didn’t like.

“Lala” Afzal, as he is known to the people of Swat, was attacked by the outlaws last year in September when he refused to succumb to the Stockholm Syndrome of the beheadings staged by Al Qaeda’s Uzbek savages. He survived miraculously after receiving a number of bullets in his body. He now asks the PPP not to go the way the supine ANP has gone. He has called its attention to the systematic target-killing of the PPP leaders in Swat and has asked the Peshawar coalition to act. The ANP government, after yielding on the so-called sharia in Swat, should know that its misplaced pacifism will soon be exposed as subterfuge rather than policy. (Daily Times, 30 June).

Afghan opium trade

HAMID Karzai of Kabul may have his concerns, some of them valid, about Pakistan’s role in combating militancy. That said, he is doing little to tackle a major insurgency-related problem that is entirely Afghan in nature. His country saw a record poppy harvest in 2007 that accounted for as much as 92 per cent of global opium production. Worth an estimated $4bn in the international market, Afghanistan’s opium output last year was equivalent to 53 per cent of the country’s licit GDP and another ‘shockingly high’ harvest is expected in 2008, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. True, more than 80 per cent of Afghanistan’s opium is supplied by the Taliban-controlled southern provinces but surely parts of his own country ought to fall under Mr Karzai’s jurisdiction. While the military might of the Taliban may be a factor, Kabul’s hesitancy in cracking down on opium production is also influenced by the systemic corruption plaguing the country. If drug lords sit in parliament, as many allege, is it likely that Mr Karzai will allow meaningful and decisive action against people whose support he needs to stay in power? But then this is just one of many areas where Mr Karzai’s rhetoric, if not vitriol, doesn’t quite match his actions on the ground.

Besides lining the pockets of tribal chiefs and politicians of criminal bent, the Afghan drug trade is fuelling the very insurgency that the country’s government and Nato troops are attempting to quell. By taxing poppy farmers and extorting protection money from operators of morphine and heroin laboratories, the Taliban are estimated to have earned more than $100m last year from Afghanistan’s thriving opium trade. The connection between insurgency and drug trafficking is well established not only in Mr Karzai’s country but across the world, Colombia and its narco-fuelled Farc rebels being a prime example. The Afghan president needs to sever the opium lifeline that feeds home-grown militants and has turned over a million of his people — nearly 3.5 per cent of the country’s population — into heroin addicts with little hope of recovery. He would be doing the rest of the world a favour too, particularly neighbours like Pakistan and Iran. Heroin addiction not only destroys individual lives, it shatters families and perpetuates poverty. It also fuels crime and contributes to the spread of potentially fatal diseases that are transmitted through sexual contact or sharing of needles. Afghanistan, with its monopoly on opium production, needs to get its act together, for its own benefit as well as that of others.
(Dawn, 30 June).


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Monday, 23 June 2008

My choice this week: 24-29 June 2008


Bill Gates and his charity work – Javed Chaudhary


Bye-elections and the future of the PPP-PML(N) alliance – Abbas Athar


General Kiyani and the NWFP operation – Asadullah Ghalib


Gul and Gul Muhammad – Hasan Nisar


PML-N's principled stance? Irshad Ahmed Haqqani


Talibanization in the NWFP – Imtiaz Alam


What next?


HOW do you talk to someone who doesn’t speak your language, shares none of your values and is on a ‘divine’ mission to kill anyone who disagrees? Is it possible for the state to strike meaningful deals with people whose goal is to dismantle the state itself? Is it rational to expect the Taliban will somehow, miraculously, see the light and become accommodating of those who do not share their beliefs? There are no simple solutions to a problem that has festered, indeed been allowed to fester, for so long. But one thing is clear: it makes no sense to continue negotiating with the Taliban on their terms. The militants have failed to live up to their side of the bargain and their tactics are getting more ruthless by the day. Towns have been stormed at will, pro-government tribesmen, security personnel and truck drivers abducted and killed, schools set on fire and alleged spies beheaded in public, as seen in Mohmand Agency on Friday. The militants, or at least elements within the Tehrik-i-Taliban, have made their stand clear. So the point arises, what course is the Government of Pakistan going to pursue? Will the security operation launched yesterday in
Peshawar and Khyber Agency be extended across Fata and the NWFP?

The nation stands at a crossroads and a consensus needs to be developed on how we are to collectively tackle the growing threat of Talibanisation. Our parliamentarians have to move beyond statements and devise a plan of action that must be implemented sooner than later. The country’s religio-political leaders ought to clarify, once and for all, where they stand on this burning issue. Do they support or oppose the brutality the Taliban are unleashing on Pakistani soil? The prime minister needs to take the public into confidence, address the nation perhaps, and explain why quelling militancy is in our own interest. At the same time, those tribals who oppose the obscurants despite having to live amongst them must be extended all possible support, for it is a gross fallacy that the Taliban enjoy universal approval in the tribal belt. If that were so, the militants would not be executing more and more tribesmen with every passing day. The Taliban way of life is such that it is not surprising that ordinary citizens who wish to live peacefully and somehow make ends meet have to be coerced into accepting it. People toe the Taliban line because they have no choice in the matter.

The fight against militancy must be a common cause and greater trust and coordination is required amongst all stakeholders, on both sides of the Durand Line. In this connection, news that the Pak-Afghan-Isaf tripartite commission will shortly be reactivated is timely and welcome. Talking at cross purposes benefits only the Taliban. Everyone else loses.
(Daily Dawn, 29 June).


Action or carrot?


THE various peace deals the government and the military signed with the extremist militants holding swathes of Fata and the Frontier in a state of siege have had their chance — and for all practical purposes failed to bring peace. The fact that our big cities and national leaders were not attacked while the accords struck with the militants held, as some are proudly pointing out, is no big achievement. Hence one derives little comfort from Thursday’s announcement by the Frontier government that the peace agreement with the Taliban in Swat still holds. Until the menace of extremism and its encroaching evil remain a stark truth, how can the peace deal be welcomed? The fact is that the acts of lawlessness on the part of the militants never fully ceased even as they engaged in talks with the government or military commanders. The destruction of a PTDC motel in Swat on Thursday should come as an eye-opener, if one is needed, for those in the Frontier government who still advocate reaching an understanding with the Taliban operating under the command of the cleric Fazlullah.

Some rethinking is in order on the strategy of appeasing militants while they hold the people hostage to an obscurantist agenda. True, there may be fringe groups indulging in violence who are not under the control of those negotiating with the government. But then those among the Taliban seeking a deal must disown their colleagues who refuse to respect their commitment and exert pressure on them. Innocent, law-abiding citizens cannot be left at the mercy of armed zealots who commit heinous crimes in the name of enforcing Sharia. The need is to ensure that girls’ schools and colleges are reopened, music shops are not threatened with bombings and those who do not obey the Taliban’s edicts are not tried and meted out horrible punishments by parallel courts run by semi-literate mullahs. The writ of the state and a uniform law of the land must prevail across the board, with no exceptions made to enforce the variety of the Sharia that only the Taliban subscribe to.

The meeting held on Wednesday between the prime minister and the army chief, which was also attended by the Frontier governor and chief minister, was a good start in that the government made its intent clearer in dealing with the extremists henceforth. It is not a question of furthering the objectives of the global ‘war on terror’ any more. It is Pakistan’s own war because the victims of the militants’ actions are Pakistani citizens. The targets of the Taliban are strategic installations, paramilitary personnel, tribal elders seen as errant, the writ of the state and the country’s foreign relations. A lack of vision thus far has emboldened the militants to appropriate more territory and exert illicit control over trade and commerce in the areas under their influence, which in turn funds their virtual war against the state. This lifeline must be severed and decisive action taken against the militants now. (Dawn, 28 June).

After the by-elections


THE ‘grand coalition’ may celebrate its victory in Thursday’s by-elections but in reality there is not much to cheer about. The results were no surprise. Held four months after the February general election, the by-elections in five NA and 29 PA constituencies tended to reflect the people’s choice made on Feb 18. Of the five National Assembly seats, the PML-N won three — all in Punjab — while the PPP secured one in
Punjab and the other in the NWFP. Of the 11 PA seats the PML-N won, 10 are in Punjab with the other one coming from the NWFP. The PPP won PA seats in all the provinces — four in Punjab, all three in Sindh, two in the NWFP and one in Balochistan, its tally coming to 10. In at least one Punjab PA constituency, the traditional rivalry between Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Javed Hashmi of the PML-N cost the PPP a provincial seat. Besides, in the current political situation, with the judiciary issue overshadowing all other national problems, the PML-N obviously enjoys an edge over the PPP because of Asif Ali Zardari’s somersault on the reinstatement question. The fate of two constituencies still remains to be decided. The Supreme Court has stayed the by-election in NA-123, where obviously Mian Nawaz Sharif will win if the legal hitch in his participation in the by-election is removed. Polling in another PA constituency had to be postponed on account of the death of a candidate. Voter turnout was low because the PPP and PML-N had generally not fielded candidates against each other.

The five assemblies are now at their normal strength, with the balance of political power remaining unchanged. The big issue is what the two major parties intend to do with their electoral victory. Going by all that has happened since Feb 18, with the PML-N and the PPP divided over the judges issue, one can expect little from the federal government in the near future. In Punjab, the change of guard at Governor House and the uncertainty stemming from Shahbaz Sharif’s two-constituency affair have added to a sense of crisis in the country’s largest province. The provincial government must prove that it has not been hamstrung by an uncomfortable political situation and that it is capable of initiating new development plans and keeping the bureaucracy, especially the law-enforcement agencies, on its toes.
(Dawn, 28 June).


How will it end?

By Iqbal Akhund

THE Mohmand incident in which 11 Frontier Corps (FC) men were killed by a US missile attack was not the first time that Pakistan territory had been violated, although it was the first time Pakistani soldiers were killed in such an incident. US spokesmen have taken the position that America acted in self-defence and has a right to do so.

The Afghan president has gone one step further and threatened to send his troops to clear Baitullah Mehsud and his companions out of their lairs inside Pakistan. It is not very likely that Karzai would actually launch such an attack but not unlikely that he had the tacit backing of the US and Nato in putting Pakistan under pressure.

Karzai was indeed only echoing their increasingly impatient complaints about the situation on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Indeed for all the praise that was lavished on Gen Musharraf as an ally and the talk about a long-term strategic relationship, there has always existed an undercurrent of disquiet in the US on where Islamic Pakistan really stands and how reliable a partner it is in the war against Islamist terror. The settlements the new government is trying to negotiate in Swat and Fata have sharpened these doubts and concerns.

The former commander of US forces in Afghanistan went so far as to suggest that men of the Frontier Constabulary may be in cahoots with the Taliban. If, nevertheless, for the moment the new government is being given the benefit of the doubt, it is thanks in part to the ambiguity and double-speak that characterise the US-Pakistan relationship.

But perhaps due also to the fact that neither side knows exactly what to do in the alternative and that the available alternatives may make matters worse.

The fact is that America’s trouble in Afghanistan goes beyond its problems with Pakistan. Essentially, it comes from the fiction underlying the concept of a ‘war against terrorism’. In the case of Iraq the deception was blatant and evident from the start and the world is now hearing it from inside sources.

Terror is not an ‘ism’; it is the weapon of the weak, the fanatical or the demented. Different terrorists — Tamils, Corsicans, the Irgun, Basques, IRA — fought or fight for different things. No one thought of going to ‘war’ against them; they were dealt with by a combination of police and political action.

Muslim terrorism too is diverse and related to Muslim grievances over the Middle East, the Balkans, Kashmir, and the Philippines. But in the Bush Administration’s view they were all lumped together as a monolithic Islamo-fascist movement, led by Osama bin Laden and headquartered in the Afghan-Pakistan borderland. This is not so but in the popular mind in the West ‘All Muslims are not terrorists but all terrorists are Muslim’ who hate western freedoms and want to set up a caliphate to dominate the world.

In the case of Afghanistan, in order to obtain quick results the Americans co-opted the Northern Alliance and thereby entered the fray in the war-torn country. This, and the way America fights wars these days, preferring air support to ground action that inevitably causes ‘collateral damage’ i.e. wedding parties, or people asleep in their beds and so forth, has caused America to be seen by the Pashtuns as the enemy in Afghanistan and so has America’s ally, the Musharraf government.

By the time the US asked Pakistan to join the action in Afghanistan, the Taliban had become more hindrance than help; a sanctuary for sectarian murderers and an embarrassment and bad example with their obscurantist policies. So Musharraf did not need the threat of being bombed back to the Stone Age in order to ditch them.

Indeed his decision to join the Americans was not unpopular, except with some religious groups; many welcomed the western aid that helped the country back from the economic and financial brink where it was at the time. Now we seem to be back there again and facing even more critical choices as the Afghan war spills over into Pakistan in the shape of suicide bombs, predator attacks, Taliban laying down the law in parts of the country.

The new government has decided to rely more on dialogue, economic and social development, etc., than on military force in order to resolve the situation. This is the right approach but this ‘new approach’ is not all that new since under Musharraf it was tried twice and it failed.

The government claims that the difference is that this time, having retaken military control of the areas, it is negotiating from a position of strength.

Moreover, the government affirms that it is not talking to the bad guys, only to peace-loving elements. The idea is to co-opt the latter in order to isolate the extremists. But the Taliban with whom agreements have been reached are threatening to go on the offensive again if the agreements are not implemented to their satisfaction within a week. One does not know what this would mean as the terms of the agreement have not been published.

In any case the Taliban threat to resume trouble does not show them to be a peace-loving lot. Moreover, the fact that they are giving ultimatums to the government, holding public meetings, going about fully-armed, does not bear out the government’s claim of being in control of the area. Nor do Islamabad and the NWFP seem to be on all fours in the matter. The situation is reminiscent of the Musharraf government’s hesitation and indecisiveness during the Red Mosque crisis. At the heart of it all is the fact that those who govern and rule Pakistan have not been able to decide whether the country they want is Jinnah’s Pakistan or Maududi’s.

Afghanistan is today a bubbling cauldron of ethnicity, nationalism, sectarianism, with drug barons and warlords and Taliban stirring the pot. Whatever happens there cannot leave Pakistan unaffected. How it will all end is difficult to tell. It is not very likely that the US would stay to the end or that the ‘democratic’ system they have installed would outlast the American presence. As things stand, the chances do not look very promising that it would end well for either Afghanistan or Pakistan or the relations between them. (Dawn).

Our dependent judiciary

By Ardeshir Cowasjee

MIAN Nawaz Sharif is of late somewhat sidelined from his running mania that he claims has much to do with the ‘restoration’ of the judiciary and the upholding of an independence it has never enjoyed, whereas in reality it is all about ridding himself of and getting his own back on President Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf.

What now distracts him is his disqualification from standing for a by-election, handed down to him by the judiciary he is also trying to get rid of. He must also be pondering upon who is behind it all, who is engineering things, and who has stabbed him in the solar plexus.

The emerging Taliban is not as worrying for Nawaz as his latent tendencies, going by his record, swing towards the Taliban way of life. We must not forget his 15th ‘ameer-ul-momineen’ amendment bill which luckily for us came to naught. We must also never forget Nawaz’s tampering with the judiciary during his second round as prime minister. A very fine and precise narrative of the events leading up to the storming of the Supreme Court on Nov 28, 1997 and how it evolved is given in Shuja Nawaz’s book, Crossed Swords, which should be on every shelf.

Shuja has written after extensively interviewing the then president of the Republic, Farooq Leghari, and the then chief of army staff, Gen Jehangir Karamat, an honourable man. Elected in February 1997, one of the first steps taken by Nawaz was to push through his 13th constitutional amendment, annulling the 8th amendment and thus Article 58-2 (b), eliminating the presidential power to dissolve parliament and giving himself powers to appoint the armed services chiefs. Both president and army chief gave their assent to this move.

He then turned to the judiciary which he felt was hostile under Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Sajjad Ali Shah, who could be rather a thorn in the flesh. To quote from Crossed Swords : “Leghari recalls Sharif coming to see him in the company of Shahid Hamid (erstwhile friend of Leghari who had appointed him as governor of the Punjab but now had been won over by Sharif) to ask him to remove the chief justice. Sharif said that Hamid would make the case against the chief justice. Leghari said to Hamid, ‘Why didn’t you tell Nawaz Sharif my expected answer. It would be the same as Benazir Bhutto’s time. No!’ Hamid retorted, ‘At that time the judges were united. Now they are divided. We can do it!’ Leghari ... warned against this move.... But Sharif was not deterred.”

He somehow managed to get round Karamat, and instigated a revolt among the judges against the CJP who, meanwhile, had dismissed as unconstitutional Sharif’s 14th amendment which made it illegal for any parliamentarian to break ranks with his party when voting in the assembly. Sharif was furious, criticised the chief justice on the floor of the assembly, at which the chief justice filed a case of contempt against him.

Karamat was brought into play, as was the chief of the ISI, Lt Gen Nasim Rana. Leghari arranged a meeting to which all the principals were summoned. Gen Karamat started by asking the CJP whether he would withdraw the contempt case. Leghari recalls the CJP’s face turning red. ‘How can you interfere with cases?’ asked Shah. ‘I came here at the request of the President, not to decide cases.’ When Sharif asked Shah for ‘mercy’ what he got was ‘I am the chief justice not for mercy but for Justice!’.”

No date is given for this confrontation, but it must have been sometime late November as Sharif’s next move was to get the Balochistan High Court to file an appeal on Nov 26 against Shah’s original appointment. Leghari passed on this information to Karamat and also told him that Shah was about to restore Article 58-2 (b). That night at 10 pm Sharif rang Leghari and asked to meet him. He arrived with Karamat, Senate chairman Waseem Sajjad, former law minister Khalid Anwar, Ilahi Bakhsh Soomro, and Gen Rana.

The law minister produced a case against the chief justice and presented a judgment dismissing Shah for Leghari’s signature. Leghari had learnt that “suitcases of money had been taken to Balochistan to obtain this judgment against the chief justice by his fellow judges,” and said he would rather resign than sign. Resignation would be the best course, as Sajjad, who would take over as president, would do as they wanted. Leghari was urged by Karamat and Rana not to resign (Soomro chipping in with ‘Why should you resign for the sake of a mad old Sindhi judge?’) They all went home at 4 am, Karamat on departing telling Leghari that if he resigned he too would resign. Leghari’s retort to that was to tell Karamat not to do so as it would give Sharif total power — like giving ‘a monkey a razor’.

Later that day, Nov 28, “the PML supporters stormed the Supreme Court.” By Dec 2, both Leghari and Shah had resigned, leaving Sajjad free to do as he liked as acting president and a new CJP, Justice Ajmal Mian. Karamat lasted until October the following year, when he was pushed by Sharif into resigning. What a sorry tale!

Nothing changes. Nawaz Sharif and his men are back, as are Asif Zardari and his bunch of dangerous cronies, all preaching democracy. They, with the advancing Taliban, will destroy, even maim and kill, to get their way. And the poor will suffer on — and on.

The one piece of bright news to come our way in Karachi last week came via the Consul General of France, Pierre Seillan, a considerate and kind man who takes much interest in the welfare of the poorer and the deprived of the city. For some time, the prisoners in Karachi Central Jail have been given the opportunity to attend art classes.

Pierre, together with Mohammad Yamin Khan, the Sindh Inspector General of Prisons, organised an exhibition at the Alliance Francaise of paintings and drawings produced by the prisoners. As the invitation card announced it was an exhibition of ‘Imprisonistic’ drawings and paintings — and it was most impressive and even more touching to see what transpires in the minds of these unfortunate men.

Overheard at the opening of the exhibition was a classic remark: Whilst the poor petty thieves and druggies suffer inside …, the Grand Larcenists are out and about, their crimes forgiven and forgotten, trumpeting their love and affection for an ‘independent’ judiciary, something they could never either tolerate or live with. (Dawn).

Tough peace in Swat

Even as the NWFP government insists it will respect its peace deals with the Taliban in Swat, the Taliban have spoken in the language of violence. On Thursday, the terrorists set on fire a four-storey motel of the Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation (PTDC) in Malam Jabba, the country’s only ski resort. They also attacked the home of Abdul Kabir, brother of Swat PPP’s vice-president Sher Khan, in Matta tehsil. They broke into the compound and shot dead Mr Kabir, his wife and son Mohammad Ali. This followed the killing on Tuesday of another brother of a PPP leader, Muhammad Zameer. While Peshawar was swearing by the peace deal, the Taliban were torching more than 12 girls’ schools in Swat.

Any other country would have descended on Swat with the full force of its capacity for violence, but admittedly Pakistan’s position is different. No matter how you look at the state’s power to maintain its sovereignty, you will come to a sharp sense of weakness. One factor is the widespread nature of the defiance it faces; the other is the lack of popular support while facing up to the terrorists. Looking at the political potential of the Taliban, one must recognise that they lack the ability to manage a viable state after taking control of it. There is no other course but to deal with them firmly with international help since ultimately the Taliban plan to export their violence (Daily Times, 28 June).

Army and the Taliban takeover

President Pervez Musharraf’s meeting with COAS Gen Ashfaq Kayani on Friday hinted at how the government is positioning itself on the question of the threatened takeover of the NWFP by the Taliban. The presidential statement issued publicly said that “religious extremism and terrorist violence must be combated with full force and all resources available”. However, to this obviously unexceptionable statement, a statement from the COAS explained that “I will act on the decision of the government”. Gen Kayani did not admit that a go-ahead had been given to him by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, making him the “principal” with powers to decide action in the areas threatened by Taliban violence.

The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) spokesman keeps saying the army is ready for action against the mounting threat in the NWFP, but it seems that the army is only “ready” for a specific order from the civilian government to proceed. But that doesn’t seem to be coming. Even as the warlords from outside Peshawar gradually take over the city through their armed warriors, the ANP government continues to hug the peace deals that already lie in tatters in Swat. And the killing of two persons closely related to the PPP leaders of Swat is sending an ominous political message to the coalition in Peshawar.

The ANP insists it is making headway with the killers, but has asked the frontier constabulary to guard its police from being annihilated by the warlords who increasingly rule the administered districts of the province. If it doesn’t take a clear line on what it is going to do about the killing of innocent people under its jurisdiction, it will start looking as ambiguous as the political parties in Balochistan, shunning violence but feeling soft towards Baloch separatism.

The federal government has turned its face away from the trouble in the Tribal Areas and the NWFP by approaching the United Nations for an inquiry into the death of the PPP leader Ms Benazir Bhutto “because another state is involved in the assassination”. Even the TV personality, the fiery Zaid Zaman, who lambastes the US and sees all kinds of American and Jewish conspiracies behind political events, was blunt in his assertion that Baitullah Mehsud had ordered her assassination.

The PPP must wake up to the Taliban threat to carve out a state with the help of Al Qaeda. The rudiments of such a state have already been put together in South Waziristan. The banned Pakistani jihadi organisations linked to Al Qaeda have already activated themselves. Sipah Sahaba, that was first revived mysteriously by the Musharraf establishment in Islamabad in the shape of a mammoth rally in May 2006, has now staged its second show of strength at a Karachi rally this week.

The Interior Ministry adviser Mr Rehman Malik has repeatedly put the nation on notice on the arrest of a large number of terrorists — most of them members of Lashkar-e Jhangvi — in Lahore and Rawalpindi with huge amounts of explosive material. But politicians clearly do not want to identify their interests in any anti-terrorism strategy. (The targeting of the PPP leaders in Rawalpindi and Swat weans the PPP and its rivals away from taking on the Taliban in the same measure.) They clutch at the wrong view that it is not “their war” and that therefore they can’t take part in the army’s “killing of their own people”.

Meanwhile, the all-Pakistan alliance of the Shia ulema went on record on Friday saying that the Taliban and Al Qaeda are killing nearly 30 Shias a day in the Kurram Agency. On the other hand, the Sipah Sahaba, mother organisation of Lashkar-e Jhangvi, is being allowed to revive itself in the country. At least one TV company doing a discussion programme on sectarianism in Pakistan has received threats from Sipah Sahaba to stop the airing of the discussion. Needless to say, the planned discussion has been dropped.

The most important first step in the direction of national security is the ownership of the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda. This time the army has clearly decided not to be left holding the baby while its real political progenitors are reluctant to confess parentage. It is not going to go to war simply to lose further face among a people more emotionally attached to other “causes”, like the lawyers’ movement, Dr AQ Khan’s freedom, President’s impeachment, etc. So we are lumped with politicians who are afraid to admit the truth and are instead repeating the convenient lie that Pakistan’s gradual descent into anarchy is because of NATO-ISAF forces and President Karzai in Afghanistan. (Daily Times, 29 June).

The law and order situation in the NWFP


Shahbaz Sharif's CMship – Nazir Naji


Hostile TV anchors – Hamid Mir


Nawaz Sharif's disqualification – the conspiracy? – Nazir Naji


Conspiracy to break the PPP-PML(N) alliance – Masood Ashar


Nazir Naji's Tamboora – Haroon-ur-Rasheed


Benazir Bhutto – Last 72 days of her life – Hamid Akhtar


New conspiracies – Abbas Athar


Someone should cry halt – Haroon-ur-Rashid


Let us mourn the NWFP – Abbas Athar


Remembering Benazir Bhutto – Abdul Qadir Hassan


New crisis starts – Abbas Athar


If BB were alive.... - Aftab Iqbal


Justice Dr Ghulam Mustafa and Shafiqa Zia-ul-Haq – Aftab Iqbal


Stakeholders in Pakistan and 'murday say udhaar' – Aftab Iqbal


A conversation with Asif Zardari – Aftab Iqbal


Slithering Talibanisation

THE tentacles are spreading and the ideology of the Taliban is claiming new ground across the country. Fanning out post-9/11 from their strongholds in the more remote tribal areas, the local Taliban ultimately made their presence felt in major Fata towns, emboldened no doubt by the state’s failure to establish its writ in South and North Waziristan. Soon forays were being made into the frontier regions (FRs) that border the tribal agencies, and then beyond into the provincial districts. The extent to which the rot had spread was brought home in early 2007 when the Lal Masjid brigade occupied a children’s library in Islamabad, patrolled the streets of the federal capital to suppress ‘vice’, abducted local women, policemen and Chinese nationals, and also set up a Sharia court in the mosque. The subsequent bloody showdown in July was proof that the Lal Masjid compound housed not just radical madressah students but ‘jihadis’ armed to the teeth with all manner of weapons. Their links with militants in the tribal areas also came to the fore.

The militants’ network must necessarily be covert but exist it does across the land. Although a stand-off as vicious as the one in
Islamabad is yet to be seen in a major urban centre, the Taliban have their supporters and areas of influence in almost every large city. Where Talibanisation once crept, it now slithers. There is a palpable fear in Peshawar these days that the recent abduction of over a dozen Christians coupled with threats to city shopkeepers and others may be a precursor to a more coordinated assault by militants. In Karachi, the Tehrik-i-Taliban are handing out leaflets warning transporters and drivers of brutal consequences — slaughter, to be precise — if they persist with trucking supplies to the ‘Christian army’ in Afghanistan.

Back in the tribal belt, militants have been operating with impunity over the last week or so, as detailed in these pages yesterday. On Tuesday, the Taliban seized a girls’ school in Bajaur and renamed it Jamia Hafsa, the Lal Masjid seminary that was at the heart of the July 2007 clashes. Other girls’ schools are also on the militants’ radar. They plan to convert these schools into madressahs because, according to a Taliban spokesman, “the western system of education is not good for girls”. From Karachi to Bajaur and beyond, ordinary citizens are helpless before the military might of the Taliban. Taking them on is a job for the state.
(Daily Dawn, 27 June).

Problem Number One finally gets attention

A meeting chaired by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has given charge of tackling the violence in the Tribal Areas to the chief of the army staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, designating him “the principal for application of military effort”. The meeting, which was also attended by the administrative heads of the NWFP and related officers of the Pakistan Army, resolved that “Pakistan would not allow its territory to be used against other countries, especially Afghanistan, and under no circumstances would foreign troops be allowed to operate inside Pakistan”. The meeting was also unanimous in concluding that “terrorism and extremism are the gravest challenge to Pakistan’s national security” and decided to tackle them through peaceful parleys, economic incentives, empowerment through development projects, as well as through “selective military force”.

With this “go-ahead” the coalition government has signalled its resolve not to postpone action against “terrorism and extremism” simply because other less important problems in the country have occupied centre-stage. Ambiguity has also been lifted from whether the war against terrorism and extremism is “our war” or somebody else’s. The meeting has granted the army permission to consider the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda as Pakistan’s national war. This is an important step to prevent the derailment of the national will to tackle terrorism in the wake of the public hostility towards the Karzai regime in Afghanistan and the NATO-ISAF forces active on the Durand Line.

The most crucial aspect of the meeting was its overt signalling of political support to the army. The most misguided comment by our politicians on the military action on the Tribal Areas earlier was that “our army is killing our own people” which reached the army rank and file and sapped their morale. Those who still say that trouble in federally administered tribal areas (FATA) is an American war and not Pakistan’s should realise the gravity of the situation developing over the past two years and climaxing in the threat to the city of Peshawar. Warlords, who will finally gang up with the terrorists if not already acting as their vanguard, have a free run of the city and kidnap for ransom to fill their coffers as the people of Pakistan sink below the poverty line.

What has been the Taliban reaction to the “peace deals” already made by the Pakistani side? The one made in Swat was so tilted in Pakistan’s favour that it aroused suspicion. Were terrorists trying to buy time for reorganisation by signing on these deals? The world told us that warlord Fazlullah was in fact giving himself time to regroup but we thought otherwise. In the event, Fazlullah reorganised and regrouped after retreating to higher locations and continues to threaten Swat whose citizens have not restarted their businesses because they expect more trouble. In his latest foray he has attacked the checkposts and burned down 10 girls’ schools to post his loyalty to the Taliban movement. This is why Pakistan has to reassert itself as a state to save its people from being brutalised further.

Warlord Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan and his petty satraps in the neighbouring agencies have eliminated all the tribal elders who favour peace talks with the government. In his most recent act of savagery Baitullah Mehsud has used the Al Qaeda signature technique of slitting the throats of 22 “peace jirga” members after attacking and occupying the town of Jandola on the border of South Waziristan next to the NWFP city of Tank. In Bajaur, the Taliban have occupied a girls’ school and converted it to a madrassa, giving it the name Jamia Hafsa in the memory of the female seminary destroyed by military action in Islamabad in 2007.

There is no doubt that war against internal terrorism is Pakistan’s war. In many ways it is more dangerous than any war we have fought in the past because it is within our national borders. We are distracted by other concomitant crises that need to be addressed; but by not deciding which one to tackle first, we are endangering Pakistan. Politically speaking, some people say that our problem number one is the restoration of the judges, but the world thinks that Pakistan is sitting on a powder keg watching “long marches” of another kind that are accorded much lower priority by us. So let us get our act together. Once we have countered the creeping loss of territory to the terrorist warlords there will be time enough to put the nation’s judicial system right.

It is only after Pakistan has brought its territory under control that it can exert sovereignty over it and extend its judicial writ to it. The sixty restored judges will be good for us only after we give them a land over which they can exercise their jurisdiction. (Daily Times, 27 June).

Mr Sharif’s by-election issue

Although the PPP has saved the day by approaching the Supreme Court on the Lahore High Court’s disqualification of Mr Nawaz Sharif from participation in the June 26 by-elections, negative fallout of the verdict hasn’t stopped raining on the political landscape. Dramatic beating of bare breasts and violent condemnations of President Pervez Musharraf and Mr Asif Ali Zardari, are mixing with “wise” council to quit the coalition and try to come back with a two-thirds majority through a mid-term election.

The APDM has joined the “I told you so” chorus by saying the PPP has “rewarded” Mr Sharif for accepting 29 seats in the Supreme Court by getting the Lahore High Court to dismiss him from the by-election. The fact that Prime Minister Gilani immediately expressed his party’s resolve to approach the Supreme Court on behalf of Mr Sharif has fallen on deaf partisan ears. Now that the Supreme Court has stayed the by-election in the relevant constituency it is possible that he will be allowed to contest. It is therefore extremely unfair to spread the rumour after this that Mr Sharif will boycott the by-election because he doesn’t recognise the PCO Supreme Court. (Daily Times, 27 June).

“Siege of Peshawar

The adviser on interior, Mr Rehman Malik, says the government is going to “take action” against elements threatening the city of Peshawar, but adds rather unconvincingly that the news about the “siege of Peshawar” is exaggerated. We hope that this “rider” clause doesn’t mean that the government’s action is going to be just another eyewash. So far, his posturings over trouble in the Khyber Agency have been unconvincing.

We wrote about the developing “siege of Peshawar” a month ago in this column. Today it is a bigger reality. The Lashkar-e-Islam chief warlord Mangal Bagh is busy solving disputes in Peshawar. After a case is brought to him in Bara he calls in the plaintive and the respondent. No one dare refuse to come. Usually it is money that is involved. He takes 2 percent from both parties, them lays down the verdict which the parties have to accept on pain of death. He also sends ultimatums to people in Peshawar who he thinks are busy doing “un-Islamic” things like watching DVDs and listening to music. He imposes big fines which are paid on pain of kidnapping and ransom. Some days ago he hijacked an entire group of Christians together with a Muslim man who had rented them his house. The Christians were released in Bara but the Muslim house-owner is still with him. He has not just besieged Peshawar, he is increasingly imposing his writ on it. (Daily Times, 26 June).

Meanwhile, Baitullah triumphs again


The Taliban warlord and head of the “emirate” of the Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Baitullah Mehsud, has mopped up the little pocket of resistance at the edge of South Waziristan to claim the entire territory as his own. He has taken Jandola after killing four local tribesmen considered “pro-Pakistan”. His militants have also entered the already troubled Khyber Agency and kidnapped 15 khassadars or paramilitary staff in order to use them as pawns for the release of men in Pakistani custody. The Taliban have also executed the 8 drivers they had caught taking food to the starving Shia population of a besieged Kurram Agency.

Meanwhile, Pakistani politics is centred on the PPP-PMLN tussle over the judges. Politicians have ignored the creeping loss of Pakistani territory to the Taliban and Al Qaeda by choosing an apparently “easier” enemy across the border in Kabul. The war to end Pakistan is going on. Our answer is: this is not our war! There cannot be a more damning statement of our ignorance and impotence than this. (Daily Times, 25 June).

Peace had its chance

STRONG and decisive action is needed without delay for the situation is spiralling out of control. Baitullah Mehsud captured and then withdrew from Jandola at will, setting houses ablaze and killing pro-government tribal leaders by the dozen. After fresh clashes in Swat that left at least 10 dead on Tuesday, the peace deal struck in May with Fazlullah’s Taliban now exists largely in name. Eight drivers who were part of a food convoy were found dead in Kurram Agency on Monday, 17 paramilitary personnel were kidnapped on Sunday night in Khyber Agency, and there are reports too of the Taliban meting out summary justice and executing ‘criminals’ in Orakzai. Even the NWFP capital is no longer safe from the rampaging Taliban and it is feared that threats to shopkeepers in Peshawar and the abduction last week of members of the Christian community may be a sign of far worse things to come.

Besides the death and destruction seen in the past week or so, what is perhaps most chilling is the consummate ease with which militants are going about their business. Their operations have shifted up a gear, possibly to exploit the chaos that passes for governance in Islamabad these days. At the same time, this latest spate of violence in the tribal belt may also be linked to the recent surge in Taliban attacks across the border in Afghanistan. In any case this madness has to stop. Taking on the militants is of course a daunting task, one that has been attempted before without much success, but the state is left with no choice other than to crack down with all the resources at its disposal. An olive branch was held out to and accepted by both Mehsud in Waziristan and Fazlullah in Swat, and that was the right thing to do. Talking peace not only offered another tactical option, it was in keeping with the spirit of democracy because many in the country favoured mediation over military action.

Peace had its chance but the Taliban blew it. True, there was a brief lull in the violence but the storm is now raging out of control. Maybe the militants were just buying time to regroup, as they did in North Waziristan in 2006. How, it may be asked, will the military option succeed where it has failed in the past. One, it is hoped that lessons have been learned from earlier mistakes, in the theatre of conflict as well as the corridors of power, and that the government will close ranks and gets its act together quickly. Two, we now have a full-time army chief who is not distracted by politics and can focus on the job at hand. Three, failure is not an option.
(Daily Dawn, 26 June).

Tipping point in judicial crisis?

A full bench of the Lahore High Court has disqualified the PMLN leader Mr Nawaz Sharif from taking part in the June 26 by-elections after agreeing with the petitioner that Mr Sharif’s conviction in the “plane hijack case” had not been positively affected by the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO). According to the petitioner, “the president could end a punishment but not a conviction under a court order”. But the honourable court stayed another application asking it to disqualify Chief Minister Shehbaz Sharif, pending a decision at the Election Tribunal. The Court had proceeded ex parte since the respondents had refused to appear because of their position that they did not recognise the “PCO judges”.

The case is immediately politicised in line with the ongoing judicial deadlock over the restoration of the judges fired by President Pervez Musharraf in November last year and the fate of the judges inducted in their place under a PCO which the mainstream political parties in power consider illegal. In fact the latest decision could convert the deadlock into a crisis if the PMLN continues to stick to its policy of not recognising the post-November 3 courts. The greatly incensed pro-PMLN lawyers’ community and most journalists are now rebuking the PPP for its “delaying tactics” and “double game” and challenging it to fulfil the pledge made by it in the Murree Declaration and restore the deposed judges through a simple parliamentary resolution, which act would also get rid of the “PCO judges”.

Interestingly, the situation is not as black and white as the lawyers’ movement and the journalists tend to make it. Both the coalition partners, the PPP and the PMLN, are also engaged in a process of bargaining over the judicial issue. They seem to have moved forward from the Murree Declaration through a number of compromises which the zealots refuse to acknowledge. The latest compromise has recently come in the shape of an agreement over the fate of President Musharraf and the inclusion of the PCO judges in the “restoration process” by increasing the total seats of the Supreme Court to 29 from 17 through the provision of money in the Budget 2008-09. The political quibbling on the part of the PMLN to justify its support to the particular budgetary sanction has apparently caused the latest outburst.

After having voted “yes” the PMLN announced that the passage of the additional budget for 29 seats at the Supreme Court did not mean that it would support the retention of the PCO judges. (It had earlier said that they could be retained as ad hoc judges.) In response, in order to prove the extent of the agreement between the two parties over the retention of the PCO judges, the PPP went public with the revelation that the budgetary provision about the Supreme Court seats was not only the result of mutual consultation but that the idea of doing it through the Budget was suggested by a PMLN leader. However, if this was actually so, the PMLN did not revise its decision of boycotting the courts, and allowed the Lahore High Court to go into the ex parte mode. This is political doublespeak of no mean order.

The biggest damage from the case has come in the shape of the language being used by the lawyers and the PMLN rank and file about the judges. The PMLN partisans are naming names and accusing them of taking “dictation” from President Musharraf and abetting the president’s vendetta against their leaders. They are even referring to the appointment of one judge of the bench as mala fide because his appointment had been earlier opposed by Mr Sharif when he was prime minister. As it is, the lawyers’ movement and the Long March, by focusing sharply on the deposed judges versus the PCO-2 judges, have brought the prestige of the judiciary to a very low point, and the angry hyperbole of the movement has led the people to believe that the judges are all generally less than honourable people.

The problem with the latest decision of the High Court is that it has chosen to ignore the political repercussions of disallowing the election of a man who is regarded today as the most popular person in Punjab. An embarrassed PPP has expressed its mayoossi (disappointment) at the verdict, but it must be on tenterhooks about what to do in the face of Mr Sharif’s obstinate boycott of the post November-3 Supreme Court. The pressure on it to abandon its old policy and go for a “simple resolution” to reinstate the judges will now increase. Or the final “parting of the ways” will stare it in the face. There are dissenters on both sides: on the PMLN side, they are mostly confrontationists opposed to the idea of the coalition; on the PPP side, they are mostly supporters of the lawyers’ movement. This chemistry doesn’t bode well for conscientious politics in a troubled Pakistan. (Daily Times, 25 June).

Our wars in our Tribal Areas

The war in Khyber Agency now parallels the war in Kurram Agency. The first is three years old and the second is two years old in its latest phase. The Khyber war has unfolded right under the nose of the administration in Peshawar; and the Kurram war has proved too much for Islamabad as it spreads to adjacent Aurakzai and Mohmand agencies, coming down to the settled districts of the NWFP like Hangu and Kohat. There is also the greater war between the Taliban and the state of Pakistan over “lost territory”, and then there is the war with Afghanistan where the Tribal Areas of Pakistan provide up to 40 percent of the “cross-border” warriors. Finally, there is the war within the warriors of which the latest example is the sectarian bloodshed in the Khyber Agency.

Two factions that came on the scene in Khyber around 2005 on the basis of their propaganda on their FM radios are now killing each other freely. So far more than 200 warriors from both sides have been done to death with automatic fire and mortars and rockets. The latest battle has killed nearly 30 in one day’s battle, if the figures claimed by both sides are to be accepted. After Bara, the killings spread to Jamrud, where the murders of innocent people are now going to be avenged. The battle has also spread to the most inaccessible but picturesque Tirah and, going by the images being shown on TV, both sides are squared off with equal strength of weaponry and manpower.

The war in Kurram Agency forms a parallel. It is also close-by because one can reach Kurram from Tirah after a few hours’ journey. While the war in Khyber is between two versions of Sunni Islam — Deobandi versus Barelvi — the war in Kurram is between the Shia and the Sunni, the two major sects of Islam. The Kurram war, mostly centred on the headquarters of the agency Parachinar with a majority Shia population, is of longer gestation. In history it was known as the Turi-Mangal tribal war as both tribes embrace different sects. But after the jihad against the Soviet Union in the 1980s, it became an indirectly state-supported mayhem because jihad was Deobandi-dominated.

Hundreds have been claimed in these two internal wars. As in other areas affected by retaliatory attacks from the NATO-ISAF forces, uninvolved populations are moving out of the affected areas and then wandering from pillar to post in search of shelter. Everywhere they go, the Taliban tighten the noose around their necks by enforcing a brand of Islam that the people have not known before. Meanwhile, the state of Pakistan is nowhere to be seen. The people of Parachinar have made heart-rending appeals to the state to come and save their lives but to no effect. The state is clearly in retreat in the face of all this.

When the Barelvi-Deobandi war started in the Khyber Agency in 2005, its repercussions went as far south as Multan and Karachi where the Deobandi madrassas organised wall-chalkings about a war that no one could figure out. Mufti Munir Shakir was fulminating against his Barelvi rival Pir Saifur Rehman. Both were exiled from Khyber but both left behind their followers. The Deobandi Mufti Shakir has now been replaced by warlord Mangal Bagh who is given to raiding Peshawar to fill his coffers and is clearly putting himself up for adoption by Al Qaeda without whose imprimatur no one can enter the business of terrorism in the Tribal Areas. On the other hand, Pir Saifur Rehman has been succeeded by other leaders, including Maulana Mustamin, who have vowed to fight to the end.

The federal government listened to the distant thunder of war on the FM radios and kept quiet, and there are many interpretations placed on this benign neglect, including the involvement of the intelligence agencies in secretly prosecuting the war against Afghanistan’s Karzai government. The MMA government in Peshawar kept out of the mess on two grounds. The first was overt and it was based on the argument that the Tribal Areas were in the charge of the federal government. That indirectly meant that the governor and the corps commander in Peshawar were effectively responsible for control and management in Khyber. The other less overt reason for the Deobandi-dominated MMA’s indifference was the natural Deobandi ascendancy of Lashkar-e Islam of Mangal Bagh, further empowered by the “alliance” between Deobandi Islam and Arab-dominated Al Qaeda.

Those who are busy counting the errors of President Pervez Musharraf these days should include the chaos of the Tribal Areas and its two epochal wars in Khyber and Kurram in their list. But the danger is that these are precisely the issues that will be ignored by his critics. And that will be the source of further trouble for the country (Daily Times, 24 June).



Doves push Nawaz towards compromise

Monday, June 23, 2008
Comment

By Ansar Abbasi

ISLAMABAD: After a brief spell of principled politics, the PML-N has finally reverted to the traditional politics of compromise and pragmatism, probably because of the power it has attained in the Punjab.

The party’s support to the highly controversial finance bill proposal to increase the vacancies of Supreme Court judges from 16 to 29 is the first major u-turn of the PML-N on the issue of the judges’ restoration and the independence of the judiciary.

The media managers of the party will try to give a spin to this move and pretend it will benefit the PML-N but this is a gamble that the second largest political party of the country is destined to lose. The step is also likely to cause a serious dent to the cause of those fighting for the independence of judiciary.

The doves in the party, led by a small but influential group of recently resigned federal ministers, have succeeded in influencing the otherwise seemingly uncompromising Nawaz Sharif. Perhaps, the effort is to make another Asif Ali Zardari out of Nawaz Sharif.

This is a sort of compromise that was least expected from the PML-N, which has widely been seen as the champion of the restoration of the judges and the independence of judiciary in the country. This decision even threatens to divide the party from within. A PML-N source told this correspondent on Sunday that there exists extreme confusion within the N-league’s rank and file about its future policy on the judges’ issue.

“Now we are not sure about what will happen next,” the source said, adding that some pro-Zardari PML-N leaders, who had to resign from the cabinet last month, have played with the future of the party to regain their lost berths in the cabinet. Of late, Ahsan Iqbal, however, has denied that any of the PML-N leaders is dying to regain his cabinet slot.

The PML-N is now offering a naÔve argument to justify its controversial move. The party leaders say that the creation of the additional vacancies in the Supreme Court does not mean that it is being done to regularise the services of the PCO judges.”We would never support the PCO judges and would continue to oppose their appointment on a regular footing against the fresh vacancies,” Ahsan Iqbal has been saying repeatedly in recent days.

But the key question is why the PML-N has not given a categorical assurance to the nation that it would not allow Zardari House, which is key to the government’s decision-making, to appoint any PCO judge against the additional vacancies.

The PPP is clear on the issue. It has repeatedly said that the stage is being set for the confirmation and regularisation of the PCO judges. On Sunday, Asif Ali Zardari made it clear in a Nawabshah news conference that the matter had been resolved between the PPP and PML-N on a compromise to have 29 judges.

After the creation of the additional vacancies in the SC with the complete support of the PML-N, the PPP would be at liberty to take its favoured decision of reinstating the deposed judges without removing any of the PCO judges. And possibly it would do the same.

In such a scenario, the PML-N’s opposition to the regularisation of the PCO judges would be nothing but a farce. If this was to be done then why did the PML-N oppose the previous PPP proposal to amend the relevant act, fixing the strength of the superior court judges, when the leaders of the two parties met in Dubai in April-May this year? The PML-N at that stage had agreed to accept the PCO judges only as ad hoc judges, strongly resisting any move to increase the number of vacancies for the SC judges.

But in the finance bill, the same proposal has been included to which the PML-N has shown its complete support. Intriguingly, as per the PPP’s claim, the controversial proposal was the brainchild of the PML-N finance minister Ishaq Dar.

The Zardari House is today in a commanding position. It has got the opportunity to get the deposed judges restored and let the PML-N face the music for the retention of the PCO judges.The PPP, in recent months, has never been sincere in championing the independence of the judiciary and has been consistently supporting solutions of its own liking such as retaining judges who have given the party some respite in the cases against them.

But these judges are known to have sided with anyone who is in power and it is not clear how Mr Zardari can depend on any judge who has supported dictators in the past. Surely he knows these judges are supporting the PPP now because it is in power and will support any other dictator against the PPP in the future.

Zardari House has the chance to regain at least some of its lost popularity by restoring the deposed judges whereas the PML-N is today vulnerable to public bashing for what could be seen as a historic sell-out of the struggle for the independence of the judiciary. The Zardari House is trying to kill many birds with one stone. One wishes to be proven wrong by the doves of the N-league.


Pakistani court bars former premier Nawaz Sharif from running in upcoming by-elections; Shahbaz case referred back to ECP

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, June 23 (AP) - The Lahore High Court ruled Monday that former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was not eligible to run in upcoming parliamentary by-elections because he has been convicted of a crime, Sharif's spokesman said. The decision is a major political setback for Sharif, making it impossible for the leader of the junior party in the governing coalition to be a member of the Pakistani parliament unless the ban on his candidacy is overturned. Sharif had been barred from running in February elections because of convictions related to his ouster in a 1999 coup. But earlier this month the nation's election commission effectively cleared him to run in by-elections scheduled for Thursday after a tribunal it set up to adjudicate the matter failed to reach a consensus. However, a candidate and a voter from the Lahore constituency petitioned the High Court to bar Nawaz Sharif’s candidacy. On Monday, a three member bench of the court disqualified him because of his conviction according to Sharif spokesman Pervez Rasheed. Sharif would appeal the verdict, he said. The same court, however, allowed Nawaz Sharif’s younger brother Shahbaz Sharif to continue to function as the chief minister of the Punjab province. “We reject this decision. This is a conspiracy,” Sadiqul Farooq, a spokesman for Sharif's party, said in a TV interview. Ashtar Ausaf, Sharif's lawyer, told Dawn News TV he was “appalled” by the verdict. He complained that the court handled the case in a “slipshod” manner and disposed of it in just three hours. Following the court ruling, dozens of Sharif's supporters, including several lawyers, chanted “Go Musharraf go” outside the court, TV footage showed. Angry lawmakers walked out of the Punjab provincial assembly in protest, private TV channels reported. The court referred a decision on Sharif's brother, Shahbaz, back to the election commission, effectively allowing him retain his job as chief minister of the Punjab province. Shahbaz Sharif was elected in a by-election to the provincial assembly following his acquittal in a murder case in March after the families of the dead withdrew their accusations. (Dawn)
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My choice today: Monday 23 June 2008

The Pakistani nation needs a visionary leader; a statesman. By Khurshid Nadeem




Nizam ki tabdeeli? Rhetoric or reality? Hasan Nisar

The pathway to the future of Pakistan – Khurshid Nadeem

Remembering Benazir Bhutto – Ajmal Niazi

Death sentence abolished in Pakistan – Abbas Athar

Myth of minorities’ protection

The ANP government is challenged by the outlaw militants of the Tribal Areas and their followers in Peshawar and has vowed to fight back to protect the city. But while the resolve is still in the process of being strengthened, a gang of “bearded youth with long hair” has kidnapped around 20 Christians of Banaras Town and savagely beaten up the rest. The Christians were gathered at a charity dinner and had no idea that they would be accused of “bad behaviour”. The Taliban left a message behind: “Christian population should mend its ways”. This is a fresh reminder for Pakistanis that Pakistan’s dirt-poor Christians have been killed in the past to avenge the killings of Muslims at the hands of American “Christians” elsewhere in the world.

Banaras Town or Banarasabad has 350 Christian families that go back in history. Peshawar itself is a kind of melting pot of nationalities and Muslim sects. The act of attacking the poorest section of the citizens of Pakistan was dastardly in the extreme. The terrorists, arriving in half a dozen brand new SUVs and as many pick-ups, failed to see the moral contrast of what they were doing. A fully armed gang had attacked the most disadvantaged section of the city. It would be a cruel joke if the 20 abductees are kept as hostages to the demand that the Americans should leave Afghanistan. Peshawar city has seen maltreatment of its non-Muslims at the hands of its “pious” extremists in the past, but this is the most shameful example of how the city has lost control over itself and finds itself in a state of siege even as it parleys with the Taliban for a “peace” deal.

But why should we single out the NWFP? Punjab has had the dubious distinction of staging the most gruesome attacks on the life and property of the country’s constitutionally protected citizens. Under the jurisdiction of the last government, Sangla Hill saw the wholesale destruction of the places of worship of the local Christians after one Christian was accused — you have guessed it — of “desecrating the Quran and insulting the Holy Prophet PBUH”. As the government — which boasted a mismatch of ideology with its patron President Pervez Musharraf — acted against the vandals with painful unwillingness, fire-breathing clerics from Lahore swooped down on Sangla Hill and saved the culprits from punishment under law.

Faisalabad has the distinction of being the scene of the self-immolation of Bishop John Jacob after the conviction for blasphemy of an innocent Christian. It outdid itself again when on June 5, 2008, the principal of Punjab Medical College, one Mr Randhava, rusticated 23 Ahmedi boy and girl students from college and ordered them out of the college hostel “with immediate effect”. His decision was triggered by the campaign of some one thousand students of the college demanding their expulsion. The zealots encircled the principal’s office and he, instead of calling in the administration, got rid of the minority students just because they were accused, falsely, of trying to proselytise on the college premises. The agitation came from students belonging to organisations like Muslim Students Federation (MSF), Islami Jamiat-e Tulaba (IJT) and Anjuman Tulaba-e Islam (ATI). Some politically “non-aligned” students joined the siege for the sake of their own safety and also for the “empowerment” which the weak enjoy by joining the strong offenders these days. The rustication order read: “Due to the religious dispute, hate material distribution and on recommendation of the college disciplinary committee, the following students are rusticated from the college as well as hostel roll under Rule III clause-V of the college prospectus with immediate effect to maintain the law and order situation in the college and hostel premises”.

The students clashed on the basis of religion. The Ahmedi students tore down the Sunni poster against their faith and were threatened. The police arrived. Governor Punjab activated the administration. A committee has been formed of three teachers of the College to find out what really happened. But everyone in the College says it would be impossible to reinstate the expelled Ahmedi students. According to a student, as quoted in a newspaper report: “The College has a very rich history (sic!) of curbing this fitna (evil). In the 1974 movement against the Ahmedis, the College played a very important role. Some of our teachers, who were then students of the College, took an active part in that movement. We are once again ready to lead such a movement if the Ahmedi students are allowed to come back to the College”.

Up in Peshawar, the state has lost most of its writ; down in Faisalabad, the dominant sect wants to finish off an apostatised minority. There are very few who would like to prevent Pakistan from violating its own Constitution that gives equal rights to its minority communities. (Daily Times).

Islamabad Knowledge City

THE development of our country’s intellectual capital is crucial because this is an important source of competitive advantage in the new economy. So is the development of academic-industry linkages. An ambitious knowledge-development project focusing on nurturing local if not regional talent is being planned for the federal capital. Known as Islamabad Knowledge City, an initiative of the federal ministry of education, the project will be executed by a nine-member task force comprising leading officials from relevant ministries and the Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry. The term ‘knowledge city’ refers to an urban centre that places knowledge at the centre of city planning and economic development, enabling knowledge flows, research, technology, brainpower and innovation to provide a sustainable environment for high value-added products and services. In other words, knowledge cities are those in which both the private and public sectors value knowledge, nurture it and spend money on its dissemination and discovery to create products and services that add value and create wealth. Currently there are over

65 urban development programmes worldwide formally designated as knowledge cities. Islamabad Knowledge City could feature on the list if the project is soundly planned and effectively implemented.

What is required is not only political will and commitment to see the project through but effective coordination between relevant government agencies and industrial and commercial sectors, both private and public. Islamabad already possesses the basic educational infrastructure for such a knowledge hub. Building on the special sector which the civic authorities recently designated as an education city, Islamabad Knowledge City can leverage all other knowledge resources in the capital including schools, higher education institutions, technology parks and other public and private academic and training institutes, particularly those in the portion of the city reserved for educational and institutional development. It is also expected to house branch campuses of leading foreign universities. Supported by adequate residential and recreational facilities, Islamabad Knowledge City could help establish the federal capital as a model in innovative education and research in this region, as well as lead the people of Pakistan in meeting the challenges of an ever-changing world. (Dawn).

Lessons of the long march
By Mohammad Waseem

THE great show of solidarity with the judiciary from June 10 to 15 ended not with a bang but with a whimper. Nothing can be more offensive to the leaders and organisers of the long march than being blamed for turning back from their commitment to lay siege to the corridors of power till they achieve their objectives. They never promised that.

But, scepticism about the efficacy of the whole strategy of the long march has crept into the minds of at least some of the leaders at the top of the movement itself, apart from others from the media, the political class and civil society.

The march was a genuine outburst of anger against a series of illegal actions taken by President Musharraf from March 9 till Nov 3, 2007. It was a tribute to the intellectual, organisational and financial commitment of the lawyers’ community to the noble cause of the restoration of the judiciary. The march exhibited a superb sense of collective leadership, and a sense of shared responsibility on the part of the leaders and their followers. The picture fitted the frame.

But the question is, to what end? This has been answered in multiple ways by people from within and outside the march. The leadership replied on a positive note; it believes that the objective of building pressure on the powers that be on the judges issue has been achieved. But, some lawyers, many journalists and a large number of participants from the civil society interpret it as a lost opportunity. In hindsight, one finds two things missing in the whole spectacle: firstly, there was no strategy to achieve the goal of putting the judges back in the courts in the form of either a sit-in or a blockade, or lobbying as a pressure group or conducting negotiations. Second, there was no policy on the target of the long march, whether it was the President House or Parliament House or Army House.

In terms of strategy, the black coats’ movement failed to devise a plan beyond a show of street power. No sit-in was on the agenda, possibly because it would have been difficult to sustain it after a while in terms of numbers, momentum and newsworthiness. To lay siege needed a commitment of a much-higher order, such as in the case of Shia activism in 1980.

In the weeks and months before the march, the leaders of the movement had consistently lobbied but failed to elicit a favourable response from the government. Similarly, no elaborate preparations were made to enter serious negotiations with the PPP leadership. In the absence of a strategy, it boiled down to a shot in the dark with a hope that sheer numbers on the street would deliver.

In the light of a long delay in the restoration of judges, protagonists of the cause wanted to put their entire weight behind the long march to achieve their objective. Others, especially from the media and political parties, cautioned the lawyers against measures that could weaken parliament and harm democracy. The leadership seemed to take two steps forward and one step back.

Who was the target of the long march? President Musharraf did it all. But, he was already relegated to a secondary role in the power structure. He could not bring the judges back to their positions even if, in theory, he wanted to do so. Why was parliament projected to be the target? Was a new law to be passed or a new amendment sought? It was amazingly naïve to target the parliament. In the end, even the parliament was not really targeted, unless gathering in the parade ground can be construed to mean that.

Prime Minister Gilani was conspicuous by his absence from the political scene altogether. It was a tacit recognition of the fact that the chief executive did not carry authority of his office with him. He was neither a part of the controversy nor the target of public anger. The lawyers’ leadership comprehensively missed out on delineating the target of their great show of discipline, commitment and solidarity.

In the first phase, the movement upheld what was essentially a legal cause. The case in the Supreme Judicial Council, later Supreme Court, against rendering the chief justice non-functional remained a constant point of reference in the movement. Lawyers were able to make a common cause with the civil society, the media and to some extent the political community.

In the second phase after the emergency, when sixty judges were sent home in an overtly extra-constitutional measure, the movement widened its scope to join the political parties in protest. The third phase after the formation of governments in the centre and provinces from April onwards obfuscated the whole situation. Partners of yesterday stood opposite each other. Partners within the coalition spoke with two faces.

What will happen now? Will the bar associations be able to mobilise lawyers and the public at large within a few weeks or months? Loss of momentum on June 15 is critical in this respect. People saw no tangible gain after their huge mental and physical input. PPP lawyers are caught between two loyalties. Meanwhile, other issues such as inflation and shortage of food items and electricity are potential competitors when it comes to attracting people’s attention and energies.

All this poses a great challenge to the leadership of the legal fraternity in terms of its credibility; and the judges’ issue is staring it in the face. Will it or will it not deliver on this count? Will it reconcile with half-way measures such as the provision for 29 judges of the Supreme Court and other ‘soft’ provisions in the envisioned constitutional package? Will the movement be overtaken by events? Alternatively, do lawyers have other strategies up their sleeve to restore the judges to their rightful positions, and the country to a respectable position in the comity of nations? (Dawn).
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Sunday, 22 June 2008

My choice today: Sunday 22 June 2008 - Swat Accord, Peace Deals with Terrorists; Marvi Benazir, The Lawyers Movement

The restoration of judges – Irshad Ahmed Haqqani

Marvi, Benazir – Abbas Mehkari

Swat accord

WHILE every effort ought to be made to salvage the peace deal struck with the Swat militants on May 21, Maulana Fazlullah and his men cannot be allowed to dictate terms. After all, only a month has passed since the accord was signed while Swat has been wracked by militancy for years. The writ of the state is still being established in the district’s more troubled regions and it is naïve to demand that all army troops be pulled out on short notice — by next Tuesday to be exact. What the militants should accept, and the state must concede not an inch more, is a phased withdrawal. If troops left the area en masse, who would ensure that the Swat Taliban are indeed living up to their side of the bargain? The police and local administration? Highly unlikely, given the latent firepower of the militants. At best, local officials can monitor the situation but they are in no position to enforce the terms of the deal: no private militias, no obstruction in the way of girls’ education and polio vaccine campaigns, cessation of attacks on barber shops and music outlets, a ban on the display of weapons and manufacture of explosive devices, dismantling of suicide squads, etc. For these and other reasons, a military presence is essential in the short term. Under no circumstances can the Taliban be allowed to regroup, recruit and otherwise strengthen themselves, which is precisely what happened after the September 2006 deal with militants in North Waziristan.

Enforcement of Sharia law in Swat is also not as straightforward as the Taliban make it out to be. True, the government accepted this demand on May 21 but the modalities of the new legal system need to be worked out and that will naturally take time. Dispensation of justice cannot be summarily handed over to the Taliban — it has to remain within the framework of the state irrespective of the changes being mulled. The release of militants captured by security personnel is a relatively simpler process, but there too a case-by-case review is perhaps in order.

It also needs to be asked why the Swat militants are in such a hurry. Does their urgency have anything to do with the ongoing surge in Taliban activity on the other side of the Durand Line? The militants must realise that laying down arms and making peace with the government is not only in the interest of Pakistan but also their own. If they resort to violence yet again, the military will be left with no option but to launch another crackdown. Worse, outside forces may take on the job without anyone’s permission. (Dawn).


Today’s despot may be tomorrow’s statesman

By Robert Fisk

HOW are the mighty fallen, we used to say. Now we turn it round. How did the fallen become mighty again? Remember the “mad dog of the Middle East” — Reagan’s stupid cliché — the “terrorist” sponsor who even sent a shipload of guns to the IRA?

A certain Moammar Qhazafi — there are 17 different ways of spelling his name in Latin script — was the crazed leader of Libya who wrote a mind-numbingly boring volume of pseudo philosophy called The Green Book and who wanted to mock the White House by calling his own palace the Green House until someone tipped him off that this would mean he would look even more of a cabbage than he already was.

Then suddenly, he gave up some imaginary weapons of mass destruction and Anthony Blair, now the commercial director of World Faith, went out to fawn over him in Tripoli and he was called “statesmanlike” by the absurd Jack Straw and then he was invited to Paris by the even more absurd Nicolas Sarkozy where he right royally made the French president look like a twat by behaving in an extremely unstatesmanlike way.

And now — bingo — Sarkozy has done it again. This time it’s Bashar al-Assad, another presumed “sponsor of world terror” — this twaddle comes from Washington, of course — who will (if he accepts the invitation francaise) be in Paris on Bastille Day to take his place in the reviewing stand at the end of the Champs Elysees. The man whom millions of Lebanese believe plotted the murder of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri in Beirut on 14 February 2005 will thus be receiving one of France’s highest honours: to stand beside the French president as he reviews his military forces.

Le Canard Enchaine, my favourite French newspaper, carried a wonderful cartoon this week in which an extremely good likeness of Bashar asks Sarkozy and the gorgeous Carla: “What is it exactly, your 14 July?” And Carla replies: “It’s the end of a tyrant.” And Sarkozy, almost lost for words, then adds: “Er — a king.” Well quite. And both apply to Bashar, whose succession after his father’s death in 2000 did rather suggest that Syria was now a caliphate (as Egypt will become if Uncle Hosni is succeeded by his son Gamal Mubarak). But seriously, how did Bashar, a hate-figure of the United States and an adjunct to Bush’s crazed notion of the “axis of evil”, get on the guest list? Sure he’s been asked to attend France’s spanking new “Union of the Mediterranean” (along with Ehud Olmert), but there’s more to it than that.

For one thing, both he and Sarkozy smell American failure. The American disaster in Iraq — and in Afghanistan (a movie coming to your local cinema soon) — and its total failure to produce a peace between Israel and the Palestinians and the loss of Lebanon as its protege (now that the pro-Syrian Hezbollah can veto America’s friends in the parliamentary majority once there’s a cabinet) means that France can move in among the wreckage for a second crack at le mandat francaise.

The tribunal to judge Hariri’s murderers still does not exist and even Walid Jumblatt, my favourite Druze nihilist, has been in Saudi Arabia to ask the king to keep pushing for the court. He did the same in Washington, chatting to Bush and Gates and the rest along the same lines. But the United States has failed in the Middle East.

Bashar is thus to be allowed back into the civilised West, which Jacques Chirac once encouraged him to visit before feeling betrayed after Syria’s apparent involvement in Hariri’s murder. My own suspicion is that Baath party security was involved in the mass assasination, but not Bashar.

Either way, it’s only 17 months since Chirac’s foreign minister, Philippe Douste-Blazy turned up in Beirut for the funeral of young Pierre Gemayel (assassinated, the usual fingers pointing towards Syria yet again) to announce that Chirac was “the best defender on earth of Lebanon’s sovereignty”. Now, it seems, Sarkozy is the best defender on earth of Syria’s sovereignty. And of Bashar.

Of course, all this is presented in what I call the politics of candlelight. Olmert may meet Bashar al-Assad, the French tell us, and thus further their indirect peace talks. It’s time to bring Syria in from the cold — which is why two of Sarkozy’s top henchmen have been in Damascus, buttering up the Syrian president in the hope he won’t turn down the trip. France will be able to encourage Bashar to behave in Lebanon, open an embassy in Beirut, delineate the Lebanese-Syrian border, blah, blah, blah. It’s a reward, too, for Bashar’s support for the Doha conference which ended — up to a point — Lebanon’s latest bout of sectarian sickness, albeit to the advantage of Sister Syria herself.

Now the Lebanese parliamentary majority is groaning about Bashar’s visit. So is France’s largest Jewish organisation, although not very successfully; last time the Syrian president visited Paris, it symbolically blamed him for the Nazi Holocaust of Europe’s Jews, which ended well over a decade before Bashar was born. Now even that elegant old butterfly from Libya is objecting to the “Union of the Mediterranean”. Yes, the “statesmanlike” panjandrum Qadhafi denounced the whole shebang with the immortal words:

“We are not dogs to whom they throw bones.” Sarkozy should have guessed.

This was, after all, the same Qadhafi who turned up at a non-aligned summit in old Yugoslavia — this from a former Serbian diplomat friend of mine — with a camel and a white horse, the first to provide milk, the second to ride through the streets of Belgrade en route to the conference. He got to keep the camel. The horse was banned.

But that’s how things go when you see yourself as a “guide” — Qadhafi’s description of himself; oddly the very same term used by A Hitler — and there really is no knowing what happens to wayward folk when they climb on our wheel of fortune. We gave Kurt Waldheim an honourary knighthood, then withdrew it when we found out he had a dodgy Second World War past. We took away Ceausescu’s knighthood when he was executed on Christmas Day. We loved Saddam when he tortured and killed all his communists — when mayor of Paris, Chirac fawned over him too — and when he invaded Iran, then hated him when he invaded Kuwait and were happy to see him hanged 17 years later.

Fear not, such a fate will not await Bashar. He will honour the downfall of the tyrant-king and he will no doubt receive economic help from France. And thus his people will not have to eat cake.— © The Independent.
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Saturday, 21 June 2008

My choice today: Saturday 21 June 2008 - Regime of Hostile TV Anchors in Pakistan; Dehshat Nigar, Media Face of Taliban;

A selection of op-eds: First "Regime of hostile TV anchors" by Najam Sethi, followed by an op-ed and Asif Zardari and NRO by Asghar Nadeem Syed.

Regime of ‘hostile’ TV anchors

Two particular encounters on two TV channels Thursday night revealed the mind of the “misplaced or hostile anchor” in Pakistan. The first was a discussion among a group of TV journalists on the accusation levelled against them that they are no longer impartial in their conduct of talk shows and tend to favour a political stance. The “consensus” was that encroachments on institutions of representative democracy by military rulers could not be viewed with impartiality, and that a show of partiality was dictated by the anchors’ loyalty to the Constitution. One opinion was that this obligatory partiality must be accompanied by “objectivity”; but it was not clear how the state of being “objective” could be reconciled with the state of being “partial”.

The other discussion was an interview with Pakistan’s ambassador Mr Hussain Haqqani by a TV journalist noted for his acerbity of approach and bias. The topic was the attack made by NATO-ISAF forces inside Mohmand Agency which resulted in the death of 13 Pakistani troops, souring Pakistan’s relations between Washington. The ambassador, while acknowledging his duty to bring the umbrage of Pakistan to the notice of the Washington Administration in the most forceful of terms, also charged the TV person with the obligation of looking objectively at the situation in which Pakistan found itself. He asked him if he took account of the ground realities in the Tribal Areas where the war against terrorism was clearly in the national interest of Pakistan. The ambassador argued for “realism” in the handling of such crises as the one resulting from the attack in the Mohmand area. But the TV anchor demanded that Pakistan approach the United Nations for a solution to the problem of the growing breach of Pakistan’s “sovereignty” and “territorial integrity”. The ambassador pointed out that the Security Council was an arena of power play, not a kind of Supreme Court where all plaintiffs were equal. The TV anchor then fell back on the argument of “national pride” and claimed to represent the people of Pakistan, arguing in favour of Pakistan opting out of the international war on terrorism. He had no answer, however, to the question about what Pakistan would do after that, after its various trouble spots are bombed by a combination of forces united inside the US Security Council.

The patriotically “partial” TV anchors began by opposing a military ruler and are now caught in a situation of political bias under democracy because of the dictates of their partiality. The 2008 elections have delivered a political battlefield where elected parties are trying to move together despite their different recipes and solutions. What should the TV anchors do now? Normally, they should have moved back and become neutral, letting the discussions be fairly judged by the viewers, but they continue to pose as arbiters and decide on their own such matters as the “mandate” of the 2008 elections, the “immorality” of the NRO, and the rough dismissal of President Musharraf from his job. But when matters are in dispute between elected parties and in parliament, it is the duty of the media to remain impartial in order to allow the people to make their own judgements.

While highlighting the “complaints” against the TV channels, one must be clear, however, about the over-all role played by our electronic journalism. Despite their early “philosophical” gropings, the TV channels are a sine qua non of our lives and their foibles of “partiality” are dwarfed by their achievement of creating awareness among the people on all other economic and social matters. For example, in Punjab, Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif is taking action, correctly, after watching TV reports on the malfunction of government institutions.

A sense of pride and sovereignty may take nations into war and humiliate them without making them understand what went wrong. This happened to Germany in the Second World War and in recent times to Serbia whose people, proud and sovereign, hate the world today for not understanding why they were killing Bosnians and Kosovars. But states don’t only feel aroused emotionally. They can also be cold-blooded. They can be motivated only by their self-interest whose pursuit might negate the state’s pride and sovereignty. When Iran and America confront each other, both tend to fly off the handle. In contrast, in Europe, where many nationalist wars were fought in the past, few feel as aroused.

Why shouldn’t a state feel emotional? Because being emotional may be contrary to its national interests. These interests are almost always economic. This is perfectly understandable because as long as a nation is prosperous and not dependent on outside creditors, its pride and sovereignty remain intact. But if a state is neglectful of its economy and pursues other emotional goals either unrelated or hostile to its economy it is bound to impose suffering on its people through the growth of poverty. And nothing removes pride and sovereignty from a nation more cruelly and quickly than poverty. Let us not forget that the organisation which kidnapped and beheaded the American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002 called itself National Movement for the Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty. (Daily Times).

Asif Zardari and NRO - by Asghar Nadeem Syed

Level of our politics

IT is the same chicken-or-egg argument, and you can choose your bet: do we have bad politicians because the army keeps interfering in matters political, or does the army interfere because the level of politics is shockingly low? Worldwide, politics is essentially a low occupation. Power makes its own demand on those who pursue it and achieve it. You don’t mind having strange bedfellows and sacrificing principles to make happy those whose support gives you a hold on parliament. But even while politicking in an unabashed pursuit of power a politician must draw a line, for you cannot stoop to a level where even the rudimentary concepts of law, justice and truth are reduced to a farce. For instance, the noble concept of accountability has been used by our generals and politicians as an instrument of persecution. Criminal cases stand withdrawn if you change your political loyalty; or else you could rot in prison or go to the gallows.

On Wednesday, APDM leaders, including such veterans of our politics as a perpetually angry Qazi Hussain Ahmed and Mahmood Khan Achakzai, threatened to expose Asif Ali Zardari’s corruption if he did not restore the pre-Nov 3 judiciary and accepted other demands, including President Pervez Musharraf’s impeachment. It is a measure of our politicians’ way of doing things that the threatened exposure of the PPP co-chairman is conditional, for they would ‘expose’ him only if he did not accept their demands. The implications are that the alleged corruption would be condoned if Mr Zardari played along. Meanwhile, agitations, street demonstrations and ‘long marches’ seem to have become an end in themselves — at least for Qazi Hussain Ahmed. A review of the JI’s politics since the end of the Zia era would make this point clear.

We also have before us an MQM statement that claims to support Musharraf’s impeachment, but the caveats it attaches to its support seem ludicrous. There are also demands that Shaukat Aziz be brought back home and tried for wrong policies. If politicians are to be tried for wrong policies — which is a matter of opinion — courts throughout the world will have time for nothing else. In the dock will not only be a glittering galaxy of foreign leaders ranging from Hosni Mubarak and Ehud Olmert to Bush and Blair but also the MMA leaders who ruled the NWFP and prohibited male doctors from treating women patients.
(Dawn).


Media Terrorists in Pakistan – Nazir Naji

Remembering Benazir Bhutto – Ajmal Niazi


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Friday, 20 June 2008

My choice today: Friday 20 June 2008


Senior leaders of PML-N anxious to regain their federal ministries – Ansar Abbasi


APDM, civil disobedience, Imran Khan and mental hospital – Abbas Athar


Asif Zardari, Nawaz Sharif and the future of Pervez Musharraf – Nazir Naji


A meeting with Musharraf – Javed Chaudhary


Why is Musharraf so confident? Asadullah Ghalib


MQM – a different perspective – Hasan Nisar

Aitzaz, Munir seeking US help on judges issue

WASHINGTON: Efforts are underway to seek immediate appointments for two of the principal leaders of the lawyers’ movement, Aitzaz Ahsan and Munir Malik, with key congressmen and senators who preside over some major congressional committees. The flying visit to Washington, if it takes place, depending on the success of the effort now underway, a congressional source said, is intended to have Congress make the successful passage of Pakistan-related bills conditional on the reinstatement of the sacked judges. A Pakistani community leader, on learning of the planned visit, said it is ironic that those who have been accusing the government in office of “taking orders” from Washington, should themselves be seeking US intervention in what remains an essentially domestic Pakistani affair. khalid hasan (Daily Times)


Historic development

THE government deserves full credit for submitting to parliament for the first time in 40 years a more detailed expenditure proposal for the next fiscal year than the usual one-liner that went under the head of defence spending previously. And by agreeing to divulge the details willingly, the top leadership of the armed forces has recouped some of the national trust it had lost over the years for being unduly secretive about its annual budgets. No one is suggesting that putting all your defence cards face up on the table is in the national interest. But keeping from your parliament what is public knowledge the world over is neither a healthy democratic practice nor an economically prudent norm. Moreover, the practice raises suspicion about one’s intentions.

However, even the two-page submission for the next year gives only cursory information about what is to be spent on the tail. There is no information here about the teeth. And talking about the tail, who does not know that the pension part of the armed forces’ budget is being consistently passed off as civil expenditure since the mid-1980s? It is also a well-known fact that the one-liners never included foreign military aid, expenditure on missile programmes and procurements using foreign credit. Moreover, the income generated by the armed forces’ diverse business interests, which alone accounts for at least three per cent of GDP estimated by a rule of thumb and is almost equivalent to the entire annual budget for the tail in recent years, was never made part of the defence budget.

The secrecy that shrouded our ‘basement’ bomb was understandable and nobody had any idea about what we had (until we ourselves went public in May 1998) because it was entirely an indigenous effort. But then for conventional arms we are crucially dependent on foreign suppliers and foreign donors and the two are not obliged not to make public our purchases. Just the other day, the Defence and Security Organisation of the
UK disclosed that over the last five years Pakistan had purchased arms worth $6bn. From US public announcements we have learnt much about the weapons, fighter aircraft and other defence equipment it has sold to Pakistan under the $1.5bn five-year military assistance programme concluded in 2003. It is these defence deals that need to be debated by parliament to see if what we are purchasing is what we really need and at the right prices. No matter who is paying for these deals at the moment, the final burden of these purchases would have to be borne by the nation and it has all the right to know the details before deals are done. (Dawn).


Is it transparent now?

By Ayesha Siddiqa

THE new government has made the defence budget relatively transparent. The new defence budget now discloses expenditure on personnel, operations and assets. It also contains service-wise breakup.

Although the disclosure is still not perfect and a lot of people expect more details, the availability of some information as compared to the one-line budget of the past is an essential first step.

It shows that the new military leadership had realised that it could not improve the organisation’s image without making some basic concessions including relative transparency of its spending.

How far the appetite for greater information will be satisfied will depend on this — and the successive — government’s ability to capitalise upon this opportunity to expand its power vis-à-vis the armed forces.

Broadly speaking, there are two patterns of transparency in military expenditure. The first relates to the Nato definition of defence spending which clearly specifies that it would include all activities, even those in the civilian sector and by para-military forces, which are designed to strengthen the military’s capability.

The Nato classification includes pension, defence industry, special projects and all other defence related spending.

The other pattern relates to the Indian definition of the defence budget that provides certain amount of details but does not meet the Nato definition. The Indian budget gives breakdowns for the three services and also figures of annual capital expenditure versus operations spending. Since there is no hard and fast rule about what each country will reveal,
Pakistan seems to have followed the latter approach. This pattern represents the via media between civilian demand for greater information and

the military’s sensitivity for some amount of secrecy.

It could be argued that it is not impossible to follow the US and British pattern of disclosure of defence estimates, but given the colonial nature of the military institution, the figures which have been provided now are better than the complete opacity of the past.

This transparency is a historic milestone on, hopefully, what will turn out to be a road to greater transparency and better civilian control of the defence sector. Improved civilian authority over the armed forces is a corollary of greater transparency and vice versa.

A more confident civilian government means the one which makes the military and the country at large confident of its ability to deliver and govern the state. In Pakistan’s historical context, the military is a political force to reckon with and it would have to be convinced of the ability of the political dispensation to govern the country to cooperate more.

A glance at the recently released budgetary figure of Rs295.306bn shows that the armed forces are spending 34 per cent on personnel, 28 per cent on operations, 4.1 per cent on travel, 29.7 percent on physical assets (meaning weapons), 8.7 per cent on civil works and 23.9 per cent goes on general expenditure.

The service-wise breakdown is 43 per cent is the army’s share, 24 per cent is for the air force, and 9.8 per cent for the navy and 22.5 per cent goes to inter-services and defence production institutions. The teeth-to-tail ratio appears negative.

The defence budget does not include approximately Rs45bn in military pensions nor does it necessarily disclose off-budget financing. There are definitional issues as well such as where to classify retired military personnel that continue to work in civilian departments whose pay and personnel cost is not charged to the defence budget. Then there are other expenses incurred by the civilian local governments on behalf of military establishments or in cantonment areas which does not show up as part of military expenditure.

One could go on and on with details of where the lines between military and civilian spending are fuzzy. Tabulating all such figures we could reach a total of Rs350-360bn. This does not mention the spending on the nuclear programme, not all of which can be found in this more transparent defence budgetary figure.

But let’s not complain about the current level of transparency. The greater problem is with the other claim regarding the possible reduction of defence spending which cannot happen due to the following reasons. First, the current configuration of the military does not allow for a substantial reduction of the military’s long-term liabilities such as personnel cost. A noticeable reduction can happen in two situations: (a) a unilateral decision by Pakistan (within a regional arms control framework) to disarm and (b) change the structure of the military by making it less labour intensive and more capital intensive.

These are serious political decisions which cannot be taken until the government is stable and the Defence Cabinet Committee of the Parliament (DCC) is strong enough to make such decisions.

Second, currently the DCC depends upon the military for input. The 22 parliamentary committees, which were formed during the 1970s as a result of ‘higher defence re-organisation’ of the Bhutto days, do not have a system whereby independent opinion is sought to corroborate the information provided by the military intelligence services and the service headquarters.

For example, during the 1980s, the air and naval headquarters had played up external threat to force the government to allow the services to buy a certain category of French missiles. Since the government then did not have an alternative source of information, it gave in to the demands. The present parliament could either encourage a system of lobbying by various stakeholders as happens in the US or allow for the streamlining of the defence bureaucracy for better information.

This brings me to the third issue of the lack of capacity of the existing Ministry of Defence (MoD). Over the years, the MoD has become impotent due to its militarisation and lack of expertise. The MoD should be manned by experts who know management of defence. This means training of bureaucrats and bringing in outside experts. The Pakistani civilian bureaucrats, especially of the MoD, are no comparison to their more powerful counterparts in India.

The appointment of military officers in key positions in the ministry has completely weakened the ability of the civilian bureaucrats to deliver. An under-capacitated MoD bureaucracy cannot reduce the wastage in the defence budget which is estimated to be over 20 per cent. This means that we cannot have reduction in the short or medium terms.

Fourth, accountability is a crucial factor. There are structural flaws in the military’s accounting and auditing system which currently encourages wastage.

Finally, given the military’s existing plans to carry out military modernisation, it does not seem that immediate defence burden will reduce substantially in the short to medium term. Thus, a short-term suggestion one could offer the existing parliament is to hold a conference of experts on military expenditure and defence accountability in which international and national experts could apprise the government about how to go about its business of dealing with the defence burden. If the cat is to be belled, let it be done properly.

The writer is an independent strategic and political analyst.

ayesha.ibd@gmail.com


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Wednesday, 18 June 2008

My choice today: Thursday 19 June 2008 - Long March or the Biryani Eaters? President Zardari, by Hamid Mir; Hasan Wasim Afzal - the most corrupt

Who is the real man of the Long March? Nawaz Sharif



Long March - The Biryani eaters show - by Nazir Naji




Hassan Wasim Afzal, the most corrupt prostitute bureaucrat who was first hired by Nawaz Sharif (Saifur-Rehman), then by Musharraf, for political victimization.

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There were some extremists in the Long March - claims Aitzaz Ahsan

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A meeting with Asif Zardari - Aftab Iqbal

Asif Zardari – Asadullah Ghalib


There were some extremists in the Long March – Aitzaz Ahsan


The Long March, Munir Niazi, and Ali Ahmed Kurd – Khalid Masood Khan



Zardari, the future President of Pakistan? Hamid Mir





Long March, Lawyers, and Mr Zardari – Syed Anwar Qidwai




Signs of a shady compromise on judges issue - Ansar Abbasi

ISLAMABAD: A dubious compromise of sorts may be in the offing in the ongoing struggle for the restoration of the deposed judges in the name of attaining the ultimate objective of an independent judiciary.

Background interactions with quarters concerned reveal some of the deposed judges were ready for a compromise to accept the PCO judges as their colleagues in return for their reinstatement.

Some top lawyers' leaders, too, in their off-the-record discussions, talk of having no option but to accept the PCO judges whereas the champion of the pro-Nov 2 judiciary, the PML-N, also seems to be showing some flexibility on its principled stand.

The compromise solution appears strange because the deposed judges would work with the PCO judges, who would be in a majority in a 29-member full court. The role of the restored judges would also be limited through some person-specific amendments to be made in the Constitution.

This solution, it is admitted, would not achieve the ultimate goal of an independent judiciary but would end up in sweeping the judicial crisis under the carpet in the name of resolving the thorny issue.

A source revealed that some of the deposed judges are frustrated to get back to their chambers at any cost. The source said these deposed judges are willing to serve alongside the PCO judges.

According to a lawyers' leader, this situation is quite disturbing for them as those for whom the legal fraternity is struggling appear to be crumbling under pressure. When asked as to why the lawyers are not exposing such deposed judges and move on for a solution that should ensure a really independent judiciary, he said the people have now developed great attachment with the deposed judges.

The lawyers' leader also ruled out the Maulana Fazlur Rehman formula which suggests removal of all the deposed as well as the PCO judges and appointment of new judges in the Supreme Court and high courts through a transparent procedure.

In one of his recent speeches, deposed chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who symbolises the ongoing struggle for an independent judiciary, had rejected the continuation of the PCO judges upon reinstatement of the deposed judges.

On the other hand, the PML-N, which gained a lot of popularity for its clear stance on the judges issue, has started to appear vague. While PML-N Quaid Nawaz Sharif has categorically stated that he would not accept the PCO judges, his lieutenants are talking of a possible compromise.

Contrary to Information Minister Sherry Rehman's clear announcement that the number of Supreme Court judges is being raised to appoint the PCO judges as regular judges, PML-N Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal said his party is not averse to the creation of additional posts in the Supreme Court.

He explained the creation of additional posts does not mean these are being created for the PCO judges. Nawaz Sharif recently told this correspondent that the Finance Bill proposal to increase the number of judges in the Supreme Court does not have his approval. The PPP, however, insistS that the PML-N has given its consent to the government on the matter.

When probed, Ahsan Iqbal revealed the move to create additional vacancies for judges in the Supreme Court is not a violation of the Murree Declaration which, he insisted, does not bar the government to create more posts for judges.

He said the question of filling of these additional posts would require a consensus between all stakeholders, admitting the PPP and the PML-N would be required to show some flexibility in their respective stands to reach a compromise. Ahsan Iqbal said his party would not agree to any solution that is not acceptable to the lawyers' fraternity and civil society.

Another senior PML-N leader, known for his closeness with the Zardari House, meanwhile, confirmed to The News correspondent Ahmad Noorani the proposal to increases the strength of the Supreme Court judges was given by the PML-N and that his party would completely support the Finance Bill, including the contentious proposal.

"How can we oppose it as we ourselves have suggested it? Rather we are thankful to the PPP to have it included in the budget document," the PML-N leader was quoted as saying. When asked how his party could accept regularisation of the PCO judges, the PML-N leader claimed it has been done in consultation with the deposed judges and the lawyer's leadership.



Waffling on


IT is not that difficult to decipher. On the face of it, much of what Mr Asif Ali Zardari has been saying these days is repetitive, with a new, odd idea thrown in here and there to arouse interest. Occasionally, he drops hints that appear pregnant with possibilities. Thus he recently said his party would soon control the presidency — making people guess at who he had in mind as the next head of state whenever a change is wrought. On Tuesday, he spoke at length, and some of his ideas were quite new, though controversial. Aware of the popular feeling about the judges’ reinstatement and the inflexible position adopted by the PML-N, Mr Zardari has been performing quite a balancing act. While he takes a dig at President Pervez Musharraf — ‘a relic of the past’ — and says his party does not recognise him as a constitutionally elected president, he makes it clear that he does not believe in impeachment either. Then mindful of the fact that the army is the army, he says he does not approve of the weakening of this institution because that could lead to ‘warlordism’. There is also a display of ego: the judges would be restored ‘at a time of our choosing’.

Tuesday’s press talk by the PPP co-chairman makes two things clear: he is keen on keeping the coalition going, and he does not believe in getting rid of President Musharraf. Differences are inherent in democracy and politics, he says, and points out that Balochistan’s PPP chief minister had not accepted the police chief nominated by Islamabad. This way he wants the PML-N too to accept the reality of the two parties’ divergent positions on the judiciary. Benazir Bhutto, he said, gave her life not for Iftikhar Chaudhry but for an independent judiciary. One wishes the PPP chief had been as clear as that in his mind at Bhurban. What he is saying today he should have had the courage to utter in March. The somersault on the Bhurban declaration turned what could have been a robust, development-oriented coalition into a dead horse.

It is time Mr Zardari stopped equivocating: let him make it clear once and for all that he regrets his party is not going to upset the present arrangement, based as it is on the PCO and NRO. Elucidating the PPP’s position will not shell-shock the Sharifs; they already stand thoroughly disillusioned. But such a categorical statement will be a signal to the coalition allies — and the confused bureaucracy — at the centre and in the four provinces to put the judiciary issue behind them and get on with the job of governing Pakistan and working for giving the hard-pressed people some relief from food inflation and blackouts. (Dawn).

Zardari, Nawaz meet in Raiwind: No consensus on judges’ issue, impeachment

* PPP co-chairman says move to impeach Musharraf should be avoided until two-thirds majority attained in parliament
* Urges former PML-N ministers to rejoin federal cabinet


LAHORE: Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif failed to form consensus on several issues including the reinstatement of the sacked judges and a move to impeach President Pervez Musharraf during a meeting held at Nawaz’s Raiwind residence on Wednesday

Zardari said that a move to impeach Musharaf should be avoided until a two-thirds majority is attained in both houses of parliament, while Nawaz insisted that the coalition does in fact enjoy such a majority in parliament.

Federal cabinet: The PPP co-chairman asked the PML-N ministers to rejoin the federal cabinet, adding that it was in the national interest and essential to streamline the functions of governmental institutions. Nawaz however maintained that his party members would not consider rejoining the federal cabinet until the sacked judges were restored in accordance with the Murree Declaration.

Zardari also urged Nawaz to reconsider the constitutional package as a means of restoring the sacked judges, and said it would help to avoid many legal and constitutional complications. The PML-N chief said that his party was firm on their position to restore the judiciary to its pre-November 2, 2007 status through an executive order instead of the parliament.

Both leaders reiterated their resolve to keep the coalition intact.

Sources privy to the meeting said that both leaders agreed that any break in the current coalition would harm the country and it should hence be maintained at all costs.



Zardari was accompanied by Adviser to Prime Minister on Interior Rahman Malik, PPP Secretary General Jehangir Badr and PPP Punjab Secretary General Chaudhry Ghulam Abbas while Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Senator Ishaq Dar, PML-N Chairman Raja Zafarul Haq, PML-N parliamentarian Makhdoom Javed Hashmi and PML-N Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal accompanied Nawaz Sharif. PML-N leaders Khawaja Asif, Raja Riaz, Zulfiqar Khosa, Sardar Yaqoob and Khawaja Saad Rafiq were also present.

Ahsan Iqbal told reporters after the meeting that both coalition partners agreed on the restoration of all sacked judges of the higher courts, yet differed on a practical method to achieve this. “Our position is that we want to see the restoration of judges and the removal of Musharraf as quickly as possible,” Iqbal said, adding, “We have differences of opinion on the issues, but our goal is the same.”

Iqbal said the sacked judiciary would be reinstated at all costs, but strongly ruled out giving any concessions to the present judges appointed through the Provisional Constitution Order (PCO). “It is unfair to treat PCO judges and non-PCO judges on an equal basis,” he said.

He said his party was steadfast on its agenda and had made it clear to the PPP leadership that Musharraf should be forced to quit his office as soon as possible, as he was busy conspiring against democracy in the President’s Camp Office. He said the next round of talks would be held on June 20, when Zardari will again visit the PML-N chief in Lahore. He added that the current meeting was a gesture of goodwill. staff report/agencies (Daily Times).


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The bubble of long March; and the Lawyers' movement


Zardari tours Lahore – Aftab Iqbal

Is it judges versus the economy?

Interestingly, no one is fully satisfied with the “conclusion” of the Long March. This is because, if truth be told, what was undertaken was not really capable of satisfying them. The lawyers’ movement was advised that the campaign was not relevant to the crisis of the economy which afflicts the masses, but such was the general enthusiasm of the campaigners that this advice was spurned as “motivated” or “subjective”. Indeed, the top legal leadership told us that after the judges are restored in the manner advocated by the lawyers, all our economic and social problems will evaporate because justice will be enshrined. (Would flour be cheap and available, electricity subsidised and loadshedding abolished?) Justice, we were told, was a universal value and the restored judiciary would produce the “just society” we craved, in short order.


With this kind of hype, disappointment was sure to come. Now the other leader of the movement, Mr Hamid Khan of Pakistan Bar Council, says that the lawyers made an “honest mistake” by not proceeding to “dharna” at the parliament and instead resolving to call off the Long March after the mammoth meeting in front of the legislature. He thinks that the decision to not allow a sit-in or “dharna” was hastily taken by “one individual who announced it without taking the implementation committee that was overseeing the event into confidence”. Clearly Mr Khan was in favour of escalation and Mr Aitzaz Ahsan of the Supreme Court Bar Association was not.

The movement has developed the classical syndrome of the radical and moderate factions. Mr Khan further says: “Members of the committee were under the impression that lawyers would stage at least a day-long sit-in, but its (sudden) termination should be construed as an honest mistake. Many bar associations went away fuming over the lost opportunity to force the government to reinstate the deposed judges”. Compared to Mr Ahsan, Mr Khan has been more courageous in telling the judges in the past what was wrong with the judiciary. As a representative of the lawyers, his valedictory speeches to the outgoing “pro-military judges” always verged on the insulting. His classic study of the judiciary — Constitutional and Political History of Pakistan (2001) — amply testifies to his credentials and his disappointment.

The movement is now being vigourously criticised. People who had kept quiet about the negative aspects of the movement are creeping out of the shadows to accuse the lawyers of “betraying” the people whose priorities were more related to their economic plight. At the risk of being provocative, one can say that they were shanghaied into the movement with an unspoken pledge of revenge. The profession’s leadership is on the backfoot and is now promising more action — maybe this time more confrontational — which would be a folly. The lawyers will continue to strike work on Thursdays, but there is a Train March in the offing too. One can hardly doubt that the aggressive lawyers who shouted slogans against Mr Ahsan at the rally for not besieging the parliament, will get the upper hand this time around. But this might also mean a bifurcation and ultimate scattering of the movement.

If it is the economy that remains issue number one and not the judges, unfortunately the problem is that our economists cannot agree about solutions in the economic realm. After the announcement of the Budget 2008-09 that is tilted heavily in favour of the agriculture sector — and making an unconvincing bow in the direction of the poor — the analytical daggers are out. And the passion for the judges is in addition to the hurt experienced at hearing that the Stock Exchange earnings were not being taxed for a period of time: “As long as the issues of the president and the judiciary hover over the head of the government and its allies, governance will be ineffective and weak. Hence, economic revival will also not be possible”.

Whatever the final response to the crisis, which is global in its sweep, it is the economy which can set Pakistan right after a period of great unavoidable pain. In Iraq, after the sects squared off electorally and rendered democracy meaningless, and the Americans relied on useless “surges” of troops, the turnaround finally came from the economy. The Economist, which had supported the 2003 invasion and the later “surge”, had to admit this week: “Thanks to soaring oil prices [the Iraq government] is flush with money. It is standing up to Iraq’s assorted militias and asserting its independence from both America and Iran. The overlapping wars — Sunni against American, Sunni against Shia and Shia against Shia — that harrowed Iraq after the invasion of 2003 have abated. The country no longer looks in imminent danger of flying apart or falling into everlasting anarchy”.

One can say that Pakistan’s problem number one was terrorism in 2007, but the national crisis occurred only after the economy faltered and the people traced it to the past government. We know that some professions are not directly affected by the economy — in fact some prosper on public misfortune — but it is their altruistic duty to help the state recover from its economic downturn. (Daily Times).
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Tuesday, 17 June 2008

My choice today: Tuesday 17 June 2008

Long March – an analysis (2) – Abbas Athar

Long March 'Thooss' – Safdar Mehmood

Dharna: illusion or deception? Nazir Naji


Long March? Who was successful? Masood Ashar



..

Marching to disaster —Zahid Hussain

At this stage, when the country faces an economic meltdown and terrorism threatens to tear it apart, the politics of confrontation could have disastrous consequences. What our politicians need to understand is that populism is a double-edged sword and could unleash forces beyond their control

The six-day-long march led by the lawyers that concluded on Saturday morning has left many questions in its wake. It was indeed an impressive show of strength and to a great extent reflected the popular sentiments for the restoration of the judges deposed by President Pervez Musharraf under the state of emergency. But it is not clear how far the rally served its stated objective of pressurising the parliament to reinstate the pre-November 3 judiciary.

The event has intensified political polarisation and left the future of the ruling coalition hanging in the balance. The slogans and the rhetoric witnessed in the rally do not bode well for the future of democracy which has barely taken off the ground and is still in a transition phase. What is more disturbing is the way the vested interests and anti-democratic forces are trying to use the issue to serve their own reactionary agenda. It is not surprising that the march ended on a bitter note, leaving the democratic forces more divided.

It was unprecedented in Pakistan’s history when the lawyers stood up against Musharraf’s March 9 action to sack the chief justice of Pakistan. The lawyers’ movement, aptly described by many as the ‘black coat’ revolution, transformed the country. It galvanised the entire population around the two-point slogan of “democracy” and “rule of law”.

The movement changed the country’s political dynamics and ultimately resulted in a humiliating defeat for Musharraf’s supporters in the February 18 elections. Musharraf’s second coup on November 3, failed to stem the tide. Indeed the restoration of judges was one of key election campaign issues, if not the main one.

It is natural for the lawyers to feel disappointed when the restoration issue dragged on. Both the PPP and the PMLN, the two main coalition partners, agreed on the judges’ restoration, but differed on the approach. The PPP links their reinstatement with a constitutional reform package which is still under process of consultation. Such divergence of views, however, is a part of the democratic process and it is the mandate of the parliament to resolve the issue.

Unfortunately, things have not happened this way. The long march has taken the battle back to the streets. The organisers of the march vowed to besiege the parliament and force the government to concede their demand. That also provided opportunity to rightwing conservative elements, marginalised in the elections, and their allies among retired army officers to reassert themselves. They are least interested in democracy or independence of the judiciary and used the rally as a vehicle to spread their retrogressive message. Their agenda is to turn the wheel of history and return the country to the Ziaist era of Mullacracy.

From the very outset the long march was turned into a PMLN show with the lawyers’ cause taking a back seat. Nawaz Sharif used this platform to vent his anger not only against Musharraf but also launched a veiled attack on the PPP leadership for backtracking on their promise to restore the judges. He made it clear that the ruling coalition could only survive on his condition.

Mr Sharif has smelt blood and wants to avenge his humiliation at the hands of Musharraf and his Generals when they ousted him from power in 1999. “Is hanging only for politicians?” he asked. The crowd responded by chanting “Hang him, hang him.” This kind of confrontationist politics could push the country to civil strife and derail the nascent democratic process. Have we not learnt any lesson from our political history?

At this stage, when the country faces an economic meltdown and terrorism threatens to tear it apart, the politics of confrontation could have disastrous consequences. The country needs statesmanship, not violent rhetoric. What our politicians need to understand is that populism is a double-edged sword and could unleash forces beyond their control. It undermines the parliament when decisions are made on the streets.

Protest is a democratic right of the people, but it cannot override the decision of a democratically elected parliament. A leader of Jama’at-e Islami has given a 48-hour deadline to the government to restore the judges and a group of retired Generals gathered under the dubious banner of Ex-Servicemen Society has vowed to continue the agitation. It is apparent that they do not have any stake in the present system and their main agenda seems to create a situation for another military takeover.

Remember the PNA movement of 1977 and what it led to? Should we allow these elements to repeat the history? (Daily Times)

Zahid Hussain is senior editor Newsline and Pakistan correspondent for The Times, London and The Wall Street Journal. He is also the author of Frontline Pakistan.


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Monday, 16 June 2008

My choice today: Monday 16 June 2008

Long March – an analysis (1) – Abbas Athar

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Let us mourn the Long March – Abdul Qadir Hasan

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Nawaz Sharif's speech at the Long March –Aftab Iqbal

Dharna dharay ka dhara reh gaya – Ajmal Niazi

Long March, Civil Society and Politicians – Khurshid Nadeem

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Stealing a march —Ejaz Haider

The restoration of the judges per se cannot lead to constitutionalism which requires the fulfilment of conditions that cannot be had in this polity in full at this stage for a number of reasons How does one analyse the Long March that culminated before the parliament building and reverse-marched after speeches by the leaders. It depends on where one stands.For the Pakistan People’s Party-led government (read: Asif Ali Zardari), the March and how it ended should be a matter of great satisfaction. The strategy Mr Zardari has adopted is increasing his choices and reducing those of his rival players. That is the basic benchmark of whether one is playing the game better than the rival players.Mr Zardari’s strategy is two-pronged: keep voicing support for strengthening the institution of judiciary while also, in principle, agreeing with the issue of restoration of the judges; and, two, resisting the demand that the judges be restored upfront while tiring out the lawyers’ movement. The latter is important because the demand, as formulated, conflicts with the pact the PPP has with General (retd) Pervez Musharraf and by extension with the army and the United States.The terms of that pact, essentially the place and position within it of Mr Musharraf, can only undergo a change if the army or the US or both review their support to Mr Musharraf. Until that happens, Mr Musharraf is secure, even if carrying the stigma of being a discredited and unacceptable president.But Mr Musharraf’s continuation in office also means the PPP cannot succumb to the demand by the lawyers to restore the judges upfront and face the possibility of another round of crippling executive-judiciary standoff. Such eventuality not only has the potential to create another crisis involving the Supreme Court and the Presidency but will also end up cutting the ground from under the government’s feet.The going is good for Mr Zardari because the lawyers’ movement has lost steam and, as was visible from the Long March, is now dependent largely for mobilised protestations on the political actors. While the APDM (All Pakistan Democratic Movement) parties, especially Jama’at-e Islami, are not much to write home about in the absence of any parliamentary presence, the big political player lending support to the movement is the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz.That is also what makes Mr Zardari breathe easy.Being in power in the Punjab in coalition with the PPP and being a junior coalition partner at the Centre, the PMLN can afford to bark but not bite. Mian Nawaz Sharif has been holding aloft the judges’ cause and it makes eminent political sense for him to continue with that without really rocking the boat for a government of which he is an essential part.His brother, Mian Shahbaz Sharif, has won uncontested and taken oath as chief minister of Punjab. He is settling in and has big plans for the province. That again is understandable because Punjab is the PMLN’s bastion and the younger Mr Sharif has the desire and the capacity to do much good.But doing much good also presupposes stability and good working relations with the Centre. So even as the elder Mr Sharif continues to thunder, the younger needs to get down to doing practical work to improve governance in the province and consequently further strengthen the party’s political position.The strategy is compatible. The younger Sharif has to start governing; the elder Sharif needs to make noises because he has gained space and acceptability with the lawyers and civil society members. Plus, he needs to keep the pressure on the PPP even as he enters into an understanding with the PPP away from the glare of the “median voter”. But, and this is crucial to understanding the game, the elder Mr Sharif cannot afford to lose Punjab.The lawyers marched to or on Islamabad, depending on how one looks at it; the democratically elected PPP government let them be, as Mr Zardari had promised and which fits in neatly with his strategy; the democratically elected party, the PMLN, lent the lawyers support and made the right noises which underscores its strategy. Some lawyers, the radical and the younger ones, wanted to take the March to a more vociferous end but they can be excused for thinking that they were participating in this country’s Boston Tea Party.By now Barrister Ahsan knows the limits and limitations of the movement he has spearheaded. He should, having co-authored a book on civil-military relations. He was thus a stabilising influence on the lawyers and announced that the March had achieved its aims. For good measure he also announced a “train march”, which, except for the problem of semantics — trains can’t march — should be okay with Messrs Zardari and Sharif.For his part, the elder Mr Sharif has also gained politically by making Barrister Ahsan accept that in the future all decisions about what the lawyers might do should be made in consultation with him. Barrister Ahsan’s acceptance indicates that he is aware of what can and cannot be done.This also means that the lawyers’ movement will now be effectively controlled by the PMLN which, being a political party, will foist its own agenda and colours on it. To that extent, the movement, in its original incarnation, is dead. Mr Zardari, I have a feeling, is smiling.In a nutshell, the Long March should satisfy all those players that are playing the game within the given structural constraints. It should be a huge disappointment for those who thought — and still think — that the March could and did herald a transformation towards constitutionalism.As I have mentioned earlier in this space, the restoration of the judges per se cannot lead to constitutionalism which requires the fulfilment of conditions that cannot be had in this polity in full at this stage for a number of reasons. (That’s a topic to which we shall return shortly.) The best one can hope for is some political stability so the current gains can be solidified before elbowing on to make more political space.


Ejaz Haider is Consulting Editor of The Friday Times and Op-Ed Editor of Daily Times


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Sunday, 15 June 2008

Pages from History: Nawaz Sharif versus the Supreme Court of Pakistan, Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah


BBC World: South Asia

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/34866.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/35468.stm

Protesters halt Pakistani PM court case: 28 November 1997 

Sajjad Ali Shah versus Nawaz Sharif: Pakistan's constitutional crisis 

The trial of Pakistan's Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, has been halted after his supporters forced their way into the Supreme Court building in Islamabad 

Protesters shouted abuse against the Chief Justice, Sajjad Ali Shah, who was hearing a case of contempt of court, which could lead to the Prime Minister's disqualification if he is found guilty. The court adjourned for the day. 

The protest is the latest twist in the country's constitutional crisis, which started over the appointment of five new judges to the Supreme Court. 

Mr Ali Shah charged Mr Sharif with contempt after his outspoken criticism of the candidates. Mr Sharif responded by trying to remove him from office. 

The two men are under considerable pressure from the country's powerful armed forces to resolve the situation constitutionally. 

Mr Ali Shah's position in the court has become increasingly uncertain after an internal struggle emerged in the Supreme Court over his status. Four of his fellow judges in two separate hearings ruled he was suspended from office because he was not the most senior judge when he was appointed. 

Nawaz Sharif's supporters halted his court hearing

Friday's trouble started when one of Mr Sharif's Members of Parliament climbed over the gates in front of the court to get inside. 

A crowd of a few hundred party supporters then began to follow him and, as the police and the security forces in riot gear stood by and did nothing, they pushed open the gates and ran into the court compound. 

A few members of the crowd got into the court building and ran to windows and onto the roof of the entrance, chanting slogans against the Chief Justice. 

Amid the commotion a court official ran to the courtroom and said the Chief Justice was in danger. The judges immediately adjourned proceedings and left the room.

The attack on the Supreme Court

Pakistan grappled with its worst-ever constitutional crisis when an unruly mob stormed into the supreme court, forcing Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah to adjourn the contempt of court case against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Hundreds of Pakistan Muslim League supporters and members of its youth wing, the Muslim Students Front (MSF), breached the police cordon around the courthouse when defence lawyer S.M. Zafar was arguing his case.

A journalist rushed into the courtroom and warned the bench of an impending attack. Whereupon, the chief justice got up abruptly, thanked Zafar and adjourned the hearing. While judicial members left the courtroom soon after, the mob entered it shouting slogans, and damaged furniture.

The unruly mob, led by ruling party member from Punjab Sardar Naseem and Colonel (retired) Mushtaq Tahir Kheli, Sharif's political secretary, chanted slogans against the chief justice. The mob also beat up Pakistan Peoples Party senator Iqbal Haider. The police managed to restore normalcy after baton charging and teargassing the mob, both inside and outside the courthouse. The court which assembled at 9:45 a.m., could continue the proceedings for only about 45 minutes.


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Nawaz Sharif: A History of Ingratitude

Nawaz Sharif: A History of Ingratitude

Mr. Sharif is not as innocent as he portrayed himself to be. If Mr. Sharif wants accountability, let’s open all the books.

By MIRZA ROHAIL BAIG

Saturday, 14 June 2008.

WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—If you are one of the Pakistanis who applauded former prime Nawaz Sharif when he addressed a crowd of deranged lawyers and paid hungry supporters – who turned the most expensive piece of property in the heart of Pakistan’s federal capital into an open air toilet last night, then you should know that Mr. Sharif is not as innocent as he portrayed himself to be.

This is a guy who went shopping in Washington DC for a U.S. $ 25,000 watch as brave Pakistanis died fighting for their honor in Kargil, a battle that Mr. Sharif ensured we lost because he was busy in a personal fight with the nation’s military leaders.

Mr. Nawaz Sharif’s record is so embarrassing that, in another country with educated voters, he would never be reelected by the people.

His record includes unforgettable lapses and mistakes, each of them worthy of an inquiry commission that could disqualify him for life:

1. This man declared emergency after the May 1998 Nuclear detonations. Under the pretext of sanctions, he swallowed up the nation’s $10 billion foreign reserves. No questions asked and no accountability since!

2. This man, Nawaz, siphoned off millions of dollars of the money collected under the ‘Qarz utaro mulk sanwaro’ scheme where he appealed to the Pakistani nation’s patriotism and asked everyone to donate money to pay off the national debt. No accountability so far!

3. This man was shopping for $25,000 Philip Patek watches in the United States when our brave soldiers were dying in Kargil. No shame!

4. This man built a 2000-acre Raiwind palatial complex for himself and his family when our nation was contributing to the "Qarz utaro mulk sanwaro" scheme to pay off the national debt.

5. This man Nawaz is a PROTEGE of past military rulers who turned him from a dumb, Nehari-loving imbecile into a leader. General Imtiaz brought him from Dubai. General Jillani and General Zia-ul-Haq groomed him. Lt. Gen. Hameed Gul created for his an entire new political party, the IJI. Today he makes fun of the military. It says something about his character. He is an ungrateful person, someone we call EHSAAN FARAMOOSH in our language!

6. He is the first ruler in the history of Pakistan and maybe the world who ransacked the Supreme Court building and unleashed the private armed thugs on Shahbaz Sharif’s payroll as a private Sharif Militia and used them to stone the building of the Supreme Court and chase out its judges who dared to challenge his actions in 1997. 

7. More than 80 complaints of corruption and misuse of authority were pending at different stages of inquiry, investigation and trial against former PM Nawaz Sharif when he was granted pardon by the president and went into a self-chosen exile. The complaint said Nawaz Sharif did not mention in his declaration of assets in the nomination form for NA-12 in 1997 that he owned a helicopter. It was alleged that he did not pay duties of Rs. 30 million on this machine. Don’t take my word for it, check this news story: http://www.millat.com/ghalibcom/events/nawaz%20exile/80_cases_pending_against_nawaz_b.htm

8. According to a report:

8.1 Rs. 1.5 billion loan was taken out by the Sharif brothers against the security of their company, Ittefaq Foundries


8.2 Rs. 302 million were obtained for Brothers Sugar Mills

8.3 Rs. 92 million for Brothers Textile

8.4 Rs. 392 million for Brothers Steel Mills

8.5 Rs. 102 million for Ramzan Sugar Mills and Khalid Siraj Textiles each

8.6 Rs. 385 million for Ittefaq Sugar Mills

8.7 Rs. 368 million for Ittefaq Textiles and 

8.8 Rs. 239 million were loaned to Ittefaq Brother.

9. The Nawaz family which is now one of the richest in the country largely due to the largesse of Pakistani banks has unveiled its one billion rupee Raiwind Complex. Spread over an area of around a thousand acres it houses palatial residences, a 300 acre farm, a 500 bed hospital, a school, a medical teaching facility, 200 acre dairy farm, a 350 line telephone exchange, Polytechnic institute, Nursing and Midwifery school etc. The Sharifs who must really be minting money have built it all in 17 months at a cost of Rs 740 million. The Punjab government headed by a Sharif has chipped in by providing government-funded roads and forcibly purchasing land for papa Sharif. http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/2423/20.html 

10. Nawaz is currently Pakistan’s 4th RICHEST MAN in the list ‘Top 40 Richest Pakistanis’. 

11. Nawaz has asked for Pakistan to open permanent border with India, VISA-FREE! Why doesn't he simply call for making both one & same country? This way he’ll get an endless supply of Indian music DVDs that he so loves!

Finally, when Nawaz’s son was suspected of having blood cancer and needed treatment in London, Pervez Musharraf violated his own 10-year agreement with the Saudis and ordered the Pakistani Embassy in Riyadh to provide the Sharifs with passports on humanitarian grounds.

Musharraf again put the exile agreement aside and helped Shahbaz Sharif get treatment in New York. 


In comparison, Mr. Nawaz Sharif could have shown magnanimity and rise above petty revenge and address the real issues facing Pakistan, internally and in the region.

Mr. Baig is a Pakistani commentator. He can be reached at opinion786@yahoo.com
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My choice today: Sunday 15 June 2008; Long March: gains and losses,

The long march: gains and losses (no more than 40,000 participants) – Irshad Ahmed Haqqani

Long march ends on bitter note

By Syed Irfan Raza

ISLAMABAD, June 14: The lawyers’ long march ended on a bitter note after a group of lawyers and political activists insisted on staging a sit-in outside the Parliament House and accused Aitzaz Ahsan of striking a ‘deal’ with the government.

About 50 agitated protesters tried to scale the ship containers set up at the D-Chowk and enter the protected area where the Parliament House, President House and Supreme Court are located.

They removed barbed wires and beat up some security personnel. They said they had been promised that their protest would continue until their demands were met.

Aitzaz Ahsan, the president of the Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA), delivered an emotional speech and said that those who were accusing him of striking a deal should realise that he had once turned down an offer of premiership made by the president.

“The president told me that he could ask the then prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, to step down ‘in 15 minutes’, but first I had to stop supporting the deposed chief justice.”

Mr Ahsan said he had sacrificed a lot for the cause and refused to become a joint PPP-PML-N candidate for two National Assembly seats. “I can assure you that I or my colleagues cannot compromise on the issue of the judiciary,” he told the people who wanted to proceed towards the Parliament House.

Persuading them to disperse peacefully, he said: “One thing which I did not want to say before the full glare of the media is that if we go ahead and stage the sit-in, this huge gathering will dwindle to just 2,000 and the impact of this show of strength will be spoilt.

“We will not relent on the issue until independent judges are reinstated,” he said.

Urging the people to go home, Mr Aitzaz said: “We will fight the war at the right time and at the right place.”

Earlier during the rally, lawyers, representatives of civil society and politicians called for President Pervez Musharraf’s resignation and the reinstatement of deposed judges, including Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, ‘with honour and dignity’.

Participants of the largest demonstration in Islamabad yet criticised the role of Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), especially Asif Ali Zardari, and accused it of delaying the restoration of the judiciary.

They said the time had come for President Musharraf’s impeachment, adding that he should be held accountable for his nine-year-long ‘misrule’.

“President Musharraf will not be given safe passage. He will be impeached and held accountable for his deeds,” chief of the Pakistan Muslim League-N Nawaz Sharif said.

“The president must be held accountable for the killing of innocent children in the Jamia Hafsa and the Lal Masjid, unprecedented price hikes, shortage of flour, the killing of 50 people in Karachi on May 12 last year, military operations in Balochistan and tribal areas and the virtual collapse of the economy,” Mr Sharif said.

The lawyers’ long march turned into a public meeting in Islamabad and was attended by representatives of civil society, ex-servicemen, workers of the PPP, PML-N, Jamaat-i-Islami, Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf, the Khaksar Tehrik, doctors, former diplomats, Madressah students, traders and businessmen and remained at the parade venue for more than 14 hours – from 3pm on Friday to 5am Saturday.

The PML-N chief, who joined the gathering at 3am, urged participants to keep up the pressure. “I can see the country’s destiny changing because of your tremendous resolve.”

Mr Sharif said that he could not understand why the PPP co-chairman was reluctant to honour the Murree Declaration. “Although I am a coalition partner, I will always support the lawyers’ demand … for restoring the pre-Nov 3, 2007, judiciary.”

However, he urged the protesters to avoid staging a sit-in because they had recorded their protest and given a stern message to the circles concerned. “This was the first step. My party is with you. We will come again … but before staging the sit-in (in front of the Parliament House), all stakeholders must agree, otherwise we will leave,” Mr Sharif said.

A timely interference by some lawyers stopped a group of young protestors from proceeding farther into the Red Zone, otherwise an uncontrollable law and order situation could have arisen.

The programme ended at 5am and people dispersed except for some youths who kept their vigil till 3pm on Saturday.

Adviser to the Prime Minister on Interior Rehman Malik, along with senior security officials, visited the venue and expressed satisfaction over the peaceful conclusion of the protest. Terming the lawyers’ protest a success, the adviser estimated that about 20,000 people had attended the event. (Dawn).

Beyond the long march

FRIDAY’S rally in Islamabad by lawyers and their political allies was a significant event by all accounts and one that fairly reflected the public mood. Credit must equally be given to the organisers and the capital’s administration for seeing the event through in a peaceful manner given the numbers that had converged on Islamabad from across the country. Both sides kept their promises: the lawyers and the participating political parties ensured that the crowd did not become unruly or go beyond the designated area; the Islamabad administration facilitated rather than obstructed the event. The decision by the organisers not to stage an indefinite sit-in in front of parliament and instead disperse after they had made their point was a prudent one. This should give the federal government the face-saving it so desperately sought as the crowds swelled through Friday and into Saturday morning. The time for parliament to take up the issue of the judges’ reinstatement is now. Stretching it any further will not benefit anyone, least of all the PPP which is increasingly seen as dragging its feet on the issue despite having made commitments to the contrary.

As for the participants in the long march, their disparate rhetoric made it clear who took part and for what cause. The lawyers want the restoration of the judges first and foremost; the PML-N, the Jamaat-i-Islami and the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf want President Musharraf impeached and brought to book for his extra-constitutional actions; the nationalist and Islamist groups want compensation for the wrongs committed against them and guarantees that they would not be uprooted and their leaders imprisoned or killed; families of the missing persons demand their loved ones back. That’s quite a list, and one that the government cannot easily ignore if it does not wish to see a repeat of Friday’s protest against its policies; the next one may not pass as peacefully.

Mercifully, the stage has not come just yet when ordinary people regardless of whichever party they voted for but reeling as they do under the burden of economic hardship, the energy crisis and so many other issues that affect them everyday, will join anyone out to rock the boat of democracy. The overabundance of piled up issues, many of which the current rulers have inherited as a legacy of bad governance that preceded them, is waiting to be addressed. As parliament takes its time debating the judges’ issue or the president’s impeachment, if at all, there is little justification for not taking on menaces like load shedding, the flour shortage, spiralling crime rate and food price inflation, for instance. Also, the making and breaking of peace deals with extremist elements the US-led Nato forces are chasing inside Pakistan calls for a clearer policy the lack of which has added to the government’s predicament in Fata and elsewhere. (Dawn).

Long march ends without roadmap

* Some young lawyers protest after Nawaz advises Aitzaz, other lawyers’ leaders to take all decisions after consultation

By Rana Qaisar 

ISLAMABAD: The lawyers’ long march ended without any roadmap for future strategy leaving many, who wanted the leadership to announce an indefinite sit-in until the reinstatement of the sacked judges, flabbergasted.

The long march caravan that reached its culmination point in the wee hours of Saturday dispersed early morning with a majority of young lawyers disappointed as Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) President Aitzaz Ahsan announced that no decision had been taken to stage a sit-in in front of parliament. 

The long march show, which had already been overshadowed by the workers and supporters of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), became a political event with the arrival of Nawaz Sharif who held parliament responsible for not restoring the judges. Covertly pointing the finger at Asif Zardari, Nawaz Sharif said: “I don’t understand why a resolution, despite an agreement, is not being tabled in parliament.” 

Addressing the participants of the long march, he said President Pervez Musharraf should be hanged. “We asked you (Musharraf) to quit with honour after the election but you didn’t…the people have now again given a judgement and want you to be held accountable,” he said, adding that Musharraf should not be given a safe exit.

“Is hanging only for politicians?” he asked and said: “These blood-sucking dictators must also be held accountable.” When he said Musharraf should be tried for treason, the participants shouted, “go-Musharraf-go”. 

He rejuvenated the lawyers by telling them that he saw in them “the dawn of a new era…your passion will restore the supremacy of the law, restore the judges and punish this dictator”. 

Mutual consultation: But at the same time he gave an unexpected twist to the lawyers struggle by advising Aitzaz Ahsan and other leaders of the movement that after the long march, all decisions should be taken by mutual consultation. 

This created doubts in the minds of the lawyers about the future strategy after the culmination of the long march and they started shouting slogans against Aitzaz Ahsan without naming him. A group of young lawyers and political workers, who had come to stage a sit-in as a follow-up of the long march, felt betrayed and attempted to cross the barbed wires to enter the Red Zone but the administration engaged them to prevent any clash. 

No end: However, angered by the young lawyers’ slogans, Aitzaz could not hide his feelings and told them that he was deeply hurt to see them feeling betrayed. “There will be no closure of this issue until the fearless, independent judges are reinstated,” he repeatedly said.

However, he did not support calls from a group of young lawyers and political workers to announce a sit-in outside parliament to press for restoration of the judges. “We will fight the war at the right time and at the right place,” he said, and referring to Nawaz Sharif’s advice, he told the participants that all future decisions would be taken with mutual consent. 

The lawyers continued demanding him to announce that he should announce the next strategy but he skilfully avoided the issues and at the end of his speech said: “no decision has been taken for sit-in” and with this he ended his speech and the long march that started on June 10 from Karachi came to an abrupt end in Islamabad. (Daily Times).

Who is the movement against?

The impressive gathering in front of the parliament in Islamabad in the early hours of Saturday is supposed to have sent a particular message to certain quarters. What did the message contain? Was there one message or more than one? For whom was it meant? What impact did it have? If there was a message or messages, were they being articulated by one party or many? Who were the people in the big crowd in Islamabad ? Unfortunately, the answers to these questions are not clear. There are as many answers as there are contenders in the movement.

Analysts of the phenomenon are of two kinds: those who support the gathering with a cool and rational head and those who cannot prevent their anger and passion from slipping into their assessments. So there is virtually no impartial observer. 

There are 130 district bars in Pakistan and the total number of lawyers in the country is just over 100,000. The long march and gathering was supposed to be of the lawyers’ movement but it was forcefully strengthened by support from a clutch of political parties and sections of civil society formations. There were men, women and children and babies, too, suggesting that overwhelmingly the mass of the people was from the local population of Islamabad and Rawalpindi. There were political parties too, led by the dominant PMLN which rules in Punjab. The APDM rejectionist group was there too, with the Jamaat-e-Islami of Qazi Hussain Ahmad and Tehreek Insaf of Imran Khan making their presence felt. 

Some political parties were conspicuous by their absence. The largest party, the PPP, was not there although it was claimed, without proof, by some observers that some PPP lawyers from Gujrat had joined the march. From among the religious parties, the peripheral Khaksar Tehreek was there but not the JUI of Maulana Fazlur Rehman; nor was the MQM represented, which actually has been designated by the movement as a “hostile” entity. The PMLQ sitting in the opposition was not there either although its stance is carefully non-hostile to the lawyers, despite the way their leader from Mianwali, Dr Sher Afgan Khan, was treated in Lahore. 

What was the message? The movement had decided that instead of the residence of President Musharraf, it would target the parliament. Although “go Musharraf go” was the collective slogan of the evening, the lawyers said they wanted the deposed PCO-2000 judges reinstated through an executive order and they wanted the PCO-2007 judges ousted. The PMLN, thanks to whom the Long March could gather steam as it passed through Punjab, was clearly asking the president to quit. The party firebrands who addressed the crowd left no ambiguity in their statements that they wanted the president to face impeachment and a trial for high treason. But Mr Ahsan said the march was to pressurise parliament to do the needful.

The people who listened to the speeches included citizens who wanted to hear negative things about a past regime that had given them prices they could not afford and the suffering through loadshedding that was beyond endurance. Among these, most were from the lower middle class who thought the lawyers and the political parties would together bring the prices down, make essential goods easily available, and banish loadshedding. But the message from the leader of the lawyers, Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan, was that the restoration of the judges under the deposed chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry would lead to an economic upturn in the short term which would alleviate the people’s suffering. 

On-the-spot analysis on TV said the gathering was not against the sitting government and one senior editor said that, like the anti-Qadiani movement of the 1970s, it was based on principles desiring change of constitution and policy. Another analyst said that the rally was against the PPP and the show did not belong to the lawyers as much as to the PMLN which was sending a message to its ally the PPP. It was also opined that in the coming days, the gulf in the coalition would widen and the PPP would be required to show as much, if not more, strength or lose the support of the masses. More emotionally, the print media analysts blamed the PPP and its leader Mr Asif Ali Zardari of being “on the wrong side of the people of Pakistan”. 

The PPP thought it could blunt the direction of the onslaught by facilitating the Long March inside Islamabad. It even offered food to the crowd but the lawyers turned it down, clearly indicating their intent to make the PPP change its mind on the methodology of restoring the judges through its constitutional package. Discussions on TV did focus on the matter of the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) which is supposed to balk the PPP, but no one suggested that the lawyers’ movement, instead of pushing the PPP into a suicidal decision, should show it the way out, which of course will have to be the middle way. 

The movement is clearly converging to confrontation with the PPP, which will create undue instability and hurt the economy currently being discussed in the National Assembly. After the PMLN ducked out of it, the PPP emerges as the sole custodian of the budget 2008-09, and the hardship it promises even as it tries to alleviate the suffering of the poor with concessions will weaken Islamabad’s will to fight all the battles facing it. (Daily Times)


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Saturday, 14 June 2008

The Long March has left many questions unanswered...

There are a number of questions which beg answer in the aftermath of the long march.

A BBC Analysis


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The Long March that fell short of its promises...







BBC/Times News/Reuters: With less than 45,000 participants including 1,000 lawyers and their assistants (munshis), 3,000 madrassash students and Mullahs, 3,000 activists of Jamaat Islami and its student wing Jamiat, 500 workers of Imran Khan's PTI, and the remaining participants brought by Pakistan Muslim League-N, the so called Long March proved to be a Short March. It started with humiliatingly low numbers in Karachi, Sukkur and Multan. It created funny scenes such as the Jamiat students beating up the pro-Imran Khan SAC students in Lahore and ended up with an ugly show of noise and indecency by a few thousand activists in Islamabd. Actually the crowd was so uncivilised and unruly that they also tried to beat their own leader Aitzaz Ahsan who was rescued by police. Here is a picture which shows that the total number of participants in the so called Long March was less than 45,000, a figure not even one tenth the claim of 5 lac made by Mr Aitzaz Ahsan.

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Rally directs anger at Musharraf : BBC

Lawyers hold a rally in front of Islamabad's presidential palace

Pakistani ex-PM Nawaz Sharif has denounced President Pervez Musharraf at a rally demanding the restoration of an independent judiciary.

Arriving during the night at the protest in Islamabad, he told thousands of lawyers and activists that Mr Musharraf must be held "accountable".

President Musharraf sacked the chief justice and about 60 other judges last November under emergency rule.

Hundreds of buses brought protesters close to parliament in the capital.

They arrived at 0200 on Saturday (2000 GMT Friday) and crowds have been milling close to the floodlit building to hear speeches by Mr Sharif and others.


'Hang Musharraf'

Mr Sharif, who is in the new coalition government, has pulled his ministers out of the cabinet in protest at the government's failure to keep its promise to restore them to office.

On Saturday, he turned his anger towards Mr Musharraf as some in the crowd, numbering at least 15,000, chanted "Hang Musharraf!".
......

Some lawyers continue sit-in in Islamabad (The News)

Updated at: 1420 PST, Saturday, June 14, 2008

ISLAMABAD: Some of the lawyers have announced to continue sit-in till the restoration of deposed judges despite that lawyers long march has ended in Islamabad. More than twenty lawyers and representatives of civil society staged sit-in outside Parliament House in contrast of the stance of lawyer leader Aitzaz Ahsan. The protesting lawyers said that they would continue sit-in till the restoration of deposed judges.
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My choice today: Saturday 14 June 2008

Tuk tuk deedam, dam na kasheedam: Long March – Irshad Ahmed Haqqani

The drop scene of the Long March – Imtiaz Alam



The Long March and the parliamentary politicians – Abdul Qadir Hasan

40,000 gather as long march reaches Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: Over 40,000 lawyers, political workers and members of civil society converged on Parade Avenue, the culmination point of the long march, at 2am on Saturday.

According to initial estimates, 20,000 activists were participating in the long march, which reached Rawalpindi at 2pm, while 20,000 others were awaiting them at Parade Avenue, where a large stage had been installed for speeches. Accompanying the lawyers were members of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, Jamaat-e-Islami and Tehreek-e-Insaaf.

Around 6,000 paramilitary troops and police were deployed ahead of the arrival of the lawyers, with military helicopters flying low over them. Authorities used barbed wire and shipping containers to block the parliament building and stationed armoured personnel vehicles at several points. The administrations of both Islamabad and Rawalpindi fully co-operated with the participants of the long march and no untoward incident occurred. irfan ghauri and aamir yasin

Meandering Long March

Despite Aitzaz Ahsan’s histrionics, one shouldn’t carry the analogy of Mao Tse Tung’s Long March too far because in it only a fraction of the marchers managed to survive. But the lawyers’ growing political baggage is making the original “legalistic” camel lurch a little. Some observers of the lawyers’ passage in Lahore say the Long March was “hijacked” by the PMLN and its leader Mr Nawaz Sharif who used the occasion at Azadi Chowk at the Minar-e Pakistan in Lahore to whip up his by-election campaign too. The public meeting was a PMLN success. What swelled the crowd was the “bandobast” for the fiery speech that Mr Sharif made on that occasion. The lawyers probably wouldn’t have wanted it, but the Long March in Punjab helped in rounding up support for PMLN in the forthcoming by-elections. It was remarked that by facilitating the chief justice the party had “established that it is the real force behind the lawyers’ movement”; the additional benefit was that it “successfully used the lawyers’ long march and the judges’ reinstatement issue to mobilise its workers for the coming by-elections in Lahore”. Thursday evening’s reception for the chief justice was organised at the venue that falls in the National Assembly (NA) constituencies NA-119 and NA-123 where Nawaz Sharif and Hamza Shehbaz are contesting the elections. Mr Sharif actually told the crowds that he needed their help in the by-polls campaigning because he was too busy campaigning for the lawyers. The deposed chief justice didn’t mind because he was getting a political boost from the occasion, but quite clearly he was projected as part of the developing polarity in the system. The lawyers Mr Sharif is boosting make no bones about their opposition to the PPP government which wants to modify the original lawyers’ demand in order to retain the PCO-2007 judges along with the PCO-2000 ones.

It is interesting that only one TV channel on Thursday dared to say that the lawyers’ movement was thin on the ground and ran the risk of being overrun by the country’s dangerously split politics. Meanwhile, the PPP was ambivalent as ever, now putting obstacles in the way of the lawyers’ march on Islamabad, now removing them and then partially retaining them. But despite this ambivalence and overt defence of the right to protest peacefully, the PPP seems determined not to give way and accept Mr Aitzaz Ahsan’s rough and ready formula of storming the citadel of the current judges and leading them out by the ear and replacing them with the old deposed ones.

If the lawyers were thin on the ground in Lahore, it is understandable. The weather is unbearably hot and the legal profession, despite its enviable district-based organisation, is spread all over Pakistan. They have to travel long distances and not all of them have air-conditioned transport. They do have “civil society” support, but this tends to be sporadic if it is not buttressed by the cadres of a political party. In Lahore on Wednesday, these cadres were more visible than civil society activists and they carried the identity markers of secular and religious parties alike and did not look like peace-loving citizens at all times. In Punjab the government is supportive and that ensures that there won’t be any trouble, but in Islamabad, with the diplomats already expressing their jitters, it can be touch and go.

The rank and file of the lawyers say they are supposed to remain gathered around the parliament in Islamabad till the judges are restored the way they want, but they have no idea how long they are prepared to stick it out. The government is making a great show of “looking after” them. The TV channels even showed the mass open-air latrines where the lawyers may relieve themselves in case they prolong their stay. The digging of the mass latrines also indicates that the government is ready to endure the lawyers’ siege if it is prolonged. But the weather is not good and tempers can flare and get out of control, especially when the APDM factions are already there to lend a helping hand.

After more than a year, the lawyers’ movement has meandered and changed from a peaceful protest to an aggressive force that can take on political baggage if this baggage promotes its campaign for the “independence of the judiciary”. The TV channels, hitting back at President Pervez Musharraf for what he did to them, have built up the lawyers and are now helping maintain the momentum through continuous coverage.

In the face of so much pressure, however, Mr Asif Zardari is like the smiling Cheshire Cat in Alice in Wonderland, here now, gone again. He does not look like a worried man at all, seemingly convinced that the storm will pass and stability will return soon. Indeed, his confidence is reflected in the simple way in which he has increased the strength of the Supreme Court from 17 to 29 by tagging a clause to the Finance Bill.

This makes his intentions abundantly clear. The old judges will return but the new judges will stay, however this is accomplished. (Daily Times)

Musharraf’s last legacy

By Syed Sharfuddin

IT is an old subcontinental proverb that an elephant costs no less than a 100,000 but a dead one costs even more. The same applies to President Musharraf. He is more important today than he was when he was combining all powers in one person — as president, chief of army staff, chief executive and the sole undisputed decision maker in Pakistan.

He was then so important that his enemies aimed thrice at his life but failed.

Today, when President Musharraf has given away most of his powers save the authority under Article 58-2 (b), which he says he has no intention of using, he appears to be even more important for the country — so important that Pakistan’s international development partners and strategic allies want to make sure that the elected government works in tandem with the president in order to complete the unfinished business of rooting out terrorism and eradicating poverty through sound economic policies and sustained political stability.

But the real reason why President Musharraf is important today is because he is the sun around which Pakistan’s small universe revolves. In an ironic way, he is the apple of the eye for the judiciary, political parties, civil society and even the Islamists. The moment President Musharraf decides to throw in the towel, the grand shows that are being staged in different parts of the country, the speeches, the street marches, numerous press briefings and last minute revelations on television screens will come to a halt.

The continuing excitement in Pakistan’s politics which is providing a smokescreen to hide the grim reality of world economic recession, rising commodity prices and a bleak investment outlook for the foreseeable future will disappear quickly like vine withering away in a rainless hot summer.

It is important to understand why President Musharraf is good for the country even if he is being called names and held responsible for every thing that went wrong in the last eight years. After all, in a dictatorship there is no such thing as a team. For as long as the King rules, there is no shortage of courtiers praising his every move and taking advantage of his favours. Once the King is deposed, all those courtiers, save a few foolish loyalists, jump the ship and join the side of the rising Regent. No wonder then that a number of retired generals who benefited under Musharraf with positions and extensions in their service are today eager to spill the beans in the name of a clear conscience.

There are also numerous well looked after politicians who are eager to leave the King’s party and join the rising powers in parliament. In this grand march of shifting opportunity, all prominent professions are on parade — politicians, military chiefs, former diplomats, lawyers, bankers, media and civil society leaders. This is the way of the world and President Musharraf should have known when he was in total control that this is how power falls.

A famous Urdu poet and writer, Ibn-e-Insha in his book Urdu ki Akhri Kitab (the Last Book of Urdu) narrates the story of an old man whose sons were very unruly and spent most of the time fighting over petty matters. He counselled them many times on the advantages of being a united family but they never reformed. When on his deathbed, the old man asked his sons to fulfil his last wish. They started quarrelling with each other on whether their father should be allowed to make a wish. What if he asked for something impossible!

After exhaustive discussions, they agreed. The dying father asked them to bring him some wooden sticks that he wanted tied together with a rope. This led to a near riot. Finally, the eldest son said to his siblings: our father is dying; let us do it for him one last time. At last better sense prevailed and they tied the sticks together with a rope. When the old man, who was by then too close to death, asked them to break this bundle the sons unanimously declared their father insane. There was no argument this time. They all said to their father; forget it sir; we have unanimously agreed to ignore your last wish. The old man was contented and died happily in the knowledge that he had finally succeeded in uniting his sons even if the price was his own humiliation at the consensus on his insanity.

If Ibn-i-Insha were alive today, he would agree that President Musharraf is like that old father who is on his way out, yet he is making every effort to keep all the disparate groups, political parties, civil society, media and people of various dispensation in Pakistan — whether they were his supporters or critics — united over their dislike for him. Some of them want to see him resign as president immediately.

Others are united in the belief that he must be held accountable for overthrowing a democratically elected government and undermining an important institution of state. Still some more want him to be accountable for the hard strategic decisions that were taken during the last eight plus years, costing precious lives in Kargil, Balochistan, North Waziristan and Lal Masjid operations. Whatever their gripe, they are united in their hatred for Musharraf. As long as he is in office as president, the nation stands united — even archrival political parties whose leaders suffered so much at each others’ hands have decided to ignore their half healed wounds. They have become brothers just to take on Musharraf.

This is a great achievement for a man who said in 1999 that the army intervened in the political process because the politicians did not play their cards right. Musharraf said the political institutions were underperforming, inefficient and corrupt; political parties were at each others’ throats; the opposition pleaded with the army chief in every government to overthrow a working prime minister. By keeping them united and not making any mistakes this time, Musharraf’s presence has acted as a catalyst for respect, tolerance and liberal traditions among the political parties in order to reinforce democracy and political ascendancy over the institutions of state. But will this survive his exit whenever it takes place? (Dawn)

The writer is a former special adviser for political affairs in the Commonwealth Secretariat, London.

Nawaz approved Kargil ‘misadventure’: new book

* Book claims Rabbani offered 0.5m Afghans for ‘Kashmir jihad’

LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz chief and former premier Nawaz Sharif was aware of the situation in Kargil in 1999 through the then defence secretary who had been briefed on the situation, a new book on the Pakistan Army has quoted a senior army official as saying.

The book, ‘Crossed Swords’, by former army chief Asif Nawaz’s brother Shuja Nawaz, quotes Lieutenant General Khawaja Ziauddin as saying that Nawaz was “in the loop”. Quoting excerpts, The Hindustan Times said on Friday that if the account were correct, it conflicted with Nawaz’s denials that he was not aware of what Musharraf and his generals had planned during Kargil. “It backs Musharraf’s contention that ‘everyone was on board’ the Kargil misadventure,” the report adds.

Shuja’s interview with Ziauddin, who was Inter-Services Intelligence boss during Kargil, also reveals that Mullah Muhammad Rabbani, the Afghan president in 1999, offered Pakistan 500,000 Afghan ‘volunteers’ for the Kashmir ‘jihad’. (daily times monitor)


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Friday, 13 June 2008

My choice today: Friday 13 June 2008 - Long March or Short March; PML-N hijacks lawyers' movement; The relaity of Geo TV;

Aitezaz Ahsan: Lawyer or Politician? Ajmal Niazi

Long march or short march? How many participants?

"I am a victim of my own creation" Agha Msood Hussain meets Musharraf

rraf


Geo TV ki haqeeqat... Nasar Malik

جیو ٹی وی ؟ کڑوا سچ !



پاکستان کے اندر اور بیرون پاکستان “ جیو ٹیلیویژن “ کی نشریات پاکستانیوں میں خوب دیکھی جاتی ہیں لیکن “ جیو ٹی وی “ کی ان نشریات میں پیش کِیا کیا جاتا ہے اور اس کے پیچھے کیا محرکات ہوتے ہیں یہ اندازہ شاید ہی کسی نے لگایا ہو ۔ اندرون پاکستان ‘ جیو ٹی وی کی نشریات پر حساس ناظرین اپنے خدشات کا اظہار تو کرتے ہی رہتے ہیں اب بیرون ملک بھی “ جیو ٹی وی “ کی نشریات پر “ پاکستانی ناظرین “ کے تحفظات میں اضافہ ہوتا جا رہا ہے ۔ لیکن کیوں؟

آئیے دیکھتے ہیں کہ جیو ٹی وی کی ابتدا کیسے ہوئی اور اس کی وہ نشریات جنہیں یہ ادارہ “ قومی مفادات اور شعور ملی کی بیداری کے لیے پیش کرنے “ کا دعویٰ کرتا ہے ‘ اِن نشریات کا دوسرے ٹی وی اداروں کی نشریات سے موازنہ کیا جائے کہ جیو ٹی وی ‘ کہاں تک “ ملی مفادات اور قومی شعور کی بیداری کے لیے متحرک ہے ۔“

یہ بات تو بالکل ڈھکی چھپی نہیں کہ جیو ٹی وی‘ امریکی امداد سے شروع کیا گیا تھا اور اس کا بنیادی مقصد مایوسیوں ‘ ناکامیوں اور محرومیوں کو یوں سامنے لانا تھا کہ عوام بحیثت پاکستانی قوم خود کو اور اپنے ملک کو “ ناکامیوں ‘ مایوسیوں اور محرومیوں کے گرداب سے کبھی باہر ہی نہ نکال پائیں ۔ پاکستان کی پچاس فیصد ان پڑھ آبادی جیو ٹی وی کی ان نشریات کو “ انکشافات “ سمجھتے ہوئے اپنی بے خبری کی وجہ سے انہیں حقیقت مان لیتی ہے ۔

اب سوال یہ پیدا ہوتا ہے کہ امریکی عہدیدار یہاں تک کہ امریکی ٹی وی نشریاتی ادارے پاکستان کے بارے میں صرف ‘ جیو ٹی وی ہی کا حوالہ دیتے ہیں دوسرے آزاد ٹی وی اداروں کا ذکر کیوں نہیں کیا جاتا ؟

جیو ٹی وی کی نشریات ہی میں لوگوں کے سر کٹے دھڑ ‘ بموں میں مرتے ہوتے ہوئے ملبوں میں دبے ہوئے لوگوں کو دکھایا جاتا ہے ۔ کیا دنیا کا کوئی اور ٹی وی ‘ ایسے مناظر اتنے تسلسل سے دکھاتا ہے ؟

ذرا سوچیئے بھارت میں کم و بیش دو ہزار مسلمانوں کو گجرات میں تین ماہ کے اندر قتل کردیا گیا ان کی املاک تباہ اور نذر آتش کردی گئیں لیکن وہاں کے ٹیلیویژن اداروں نے ان وارداتوں کی دستاویزی نشریات کہاں دکھائیں ۔ کیا مسلمانوں کے اس قتل عام کے بارے میں ذی ٹی وی ‘ سونی ٹی وی اور دیگر انڈین ٹی وی چینلز نے کوئی نشریات پیش کیں ؟

بھارت میں اس وقت آسام و بہار سے لے کر پنجاب اور کشمیر تک کم سے کم اٹھانوے علیحدگی پسند تحریک متحرک ہیں کیا کبھی ذی ٹی وی ‘ سونی ٹی وی نے ان کی لڑائیوں اور مارے جانے والے بھارتی فوجیوں اور سیکورٹی والوں کی کوریج کی ہے ؟ کیا کبھی بھارتی چینلوں نے بھارت کے ڈھائی سو ملین لوگوں کو گلیوں میں فٹ پاتھوں پر ریلوے کی لائینوں کے اردگرد سوتے دکھایا ہے ؟

اسلام آباد میں لال مسجد کاواقعہ جیو ٹی وی کے نشریاتی پروگراموں میں اب تک سر فہرست ‘ بینر کے طور پر دکھایا جاتا ہے۔ کتنے بھارتی ٹی وی ہر روز ‘ گولڈن ٹمپل پر حملے ‘ اندرا گاندھی کے قتل ‘ بابری مسجد کے انہدام ‘ گجرات و بہار کے مسلمانوں کے قتل عام ‘ راجیو گاند ھی کے قتل اور اسی طرح کے دوسرے واقعات کی کلپ فملیں اپنےآغاز پروگرام میں دکھاتے ہیں ؟

کیا آپ نے کبھی بھارتی سیاستدانوں کو ‘ اختلاف رکھنے کے باوجود اپنے صدر یا وزیر اعظم کے خلاف ‘ ٹی وی پینلز پر ‘ نازیبا زبان استعمال کرتے ‘ گالیاں دیتے اور کھلم کھلا اُن کے لیے موت ‘ پھانسی اور جلاوطنی جیسی سزائیں تجویز کرتے سنا ہے ؟ جیو ٹی وی پاکستان میں پاکستانی سیاستدانوں کے ایسے بیانات سنا رہا ہے آخر کیوں ؟ صحافت کا اپنا ضابطہ اخلاق کس گنگا میں بہا دیا گیا ہے ؟

جیو ٹی وی ‘ بے نظیر بھٹو‘ آصف زرداری اور ان جیسے دوسروں کی اس دولت کے بارے میں دستاویزی پروگرام نشر کیوں نہیں کرتا بحث مباحثے کیوں نہیں کراتا‘ جو دولت انہوں نے اپنے دور میں قومی خزانے سے لوٹی ۔ بیرون ملک بنک بیلنس بنائے ‘ محل خریدے ؟ نواز شریف اور خود سابق چیف جسٹس کی کارستانیوں سے پردہ کیوں نہیں اٹھایا؟

اب کچھ جیو ٹی وی کی مزید “ قومی خدمات “ کے بارے میں ۔

جیو ٹی وی نے نام نہاد ایمرجنسی کی جعلی خبریں یوں نشر کیں کہ ملک بھر میں سٹاک مارکیٹ کا جنازہ نکل گیا کیونکہ جیو کے نام نہاد اقتصادی ماہرین کو ہدایات ہی یہی تھیں کہ کیا کہنا ہے اور ملک میں اقتصادی افراتفری کو ہوا کیسے دینی ہے۔

کامران خالد ‘ پچیس لاکھروپے ماہانہ جیو ٹی وی سے کس بات کے وصول کرتے تھے ۔

ڈاکٹر شاھد مسعود ‘ “ این ایس ایف “ کے باقاعدہ رکن تھے ۔ این ایس ایف پاکستان کی بنیادی نظریئے اور اس کی سالمیت کے ساتھ ساتھ جماعت اسلامی کی کٹر مخالف ہے ۔ یہ صاحب بائیس لاکھ روپیہ ماہانہ لیتے ‘ اور کراچی و دوبئی میں شاندار مکانات رکھتے ہیں ۔

حامد میر جیسے نام نہاد مبصر ‘ روزنامہ اوصاف کے مدیر کو بھی بھاری رقوم ادا کی گئیں اور نادیہ خان نے بھی پیسے بنائے ۔ مل ملا کر چھ لاکھ روپے ان آزاد صحافیوں کو دیئے گئے ۔ کیوں ؟

سوچا جا سکتا ہے کہ کرکٹ کا میچ نہ دکھا کر جیو ٹی وی نے خود بتایا کہ اسے ایک ملین روپے کا خسارہ ہوا ہے تو سوال یہ پیدا ہوتا ہے کہ اب چوبیس گھنٹے سابق جسٹس افتخار کی جو کوریج نشر کی جا رہی ہے اس کے اخراجات جیو والے کیسے اور کہاں سے پورے کر رہے ہیں ؟ ان اخراجات کا ذرا تخمینہ تو لگا کر دیکھئے ۔ یہ تو سی این این ‘ بی بی سی بھی برداشت نہیں کر سکتے ۔

پچاس فیصد بھارتی ڈرامے اور باقی کی ثقافتی نشریات میں پاکستانی و بھارتی فلموں کا مشترکہ طور پر نشریاتی وقت ـ کیا معنی رکھتا ہے اور کس دیس کی خدمت کر رہا ہے اور کیوں؟

القصہ مختصر “ جیو‘ جدید استعماری آقاؤں کے اشاروں پر “ اتنا جھوٹ بولو کہ سچ ہو جائے “ کی پالیسی پر عمل کرتے ہوئے “ اتنا جھوٹ بول چکا ہے اور بول رہا ہے کہ پاکستانی قوم اندرون وطن اور بیرون وطن ‘ جیو کی ہر خبر کو “ جھوٹ “ جانتے ہوئے بھی “ سچ “ ماننے پر مجبور ہو جاتی ہے ۔ کیا آپ اس سے متفق نہیں ہیں؟ اور متفق نہیں تو ‘ کیوں؟؟
( القمر آن لائن بلاگ

Will Nawaz Sharif change Musharraf's policy on 'war on terror'?

PML-N hijacks lawyers’ movement: Party using long march to mobilise workers for by-elections

By Amjad Warraich

LAHORE: The way the lawyers’ long march is proceeding shows that Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif has succeeded in getting political mileage out of the movement, but the lawyers have lost.

Although the PML-N was very much on the centre stage of sacked chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry’s reception at Lahore Airport on Wednesday, it put in more energy on Thursday to make a public meeting near Minar-e-Pakistan a success. It was perhaps because of this that the attendance in Wednesday’s reception from the airport to the high court premises remained below 3,000, but increased remarkably at the Circular Road public meeting where Nawaz was scheduled to address the audience.

The PML-N leadership has achieved two objectives – it has established that it is the real force behind the lawyers’ movement, and it successfully used the lawyers’ long march and the judges’ reinstatement issue to mobilise its workers for the coming by-elections in Lahore.

This is also evident from the selection of the venue for PML-N reception for long march participants on Thursday evening. The venue falls in the National Assembly (NA) constituencies NA-119 and NA-123 where Nawaz Sharif and Hamza Shahbaz are contesting the elections.

Nawaz Sharif reminded the audience in his speech that he was a candidate in the by-elections from a Lahore constituency. He told the participants to campaign for him since he was busy handling more important issues such as the one for which the long march was organised. Some analysts therefore believe the PML-N is using the sacked chief justice for its election campaign.

It is interesting to note that Chaudhry was earlier invited to Faisalabad where his cousin and Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah is contesting for a provincial assembly seat.

By-elections are also being held for two provincial constituencies in Lahore besides two NA seats, one NA seat in Muridke Sheikhupura, one provincial assembly seat in Gujranwala, two in Sialkot, one in Mandi Bahauddin, and one provincial assembly and two NA seats in Rawalpindi. All these constituencies fall in or near the route of the long march.

As for the long march route from Multan to Lahore, by-elections are being conducted for one provincial seat in Khanewal and Pakpattan districts each, and one NA seat in Okara.

All constituencies except three have been allocated to PML-N in its seat adjustment with the Pakistan People’s Party.

Not only the PML-N, but the Punjab government machinery is also fully contributing in the long march under instructions by PML-N President and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif. The Punjab government is using all local administration machinery to facilitate the long march.

For example, the district government machinery set up all stages on the long march route in Lahore including the one that Nawaz Sharif used to address the participants. Similar facilities have been provided to long march participants all over Punjab, from Rahimyar Khan to Rawalpindi. (Daily Times).

From dissent to dispute —Ejaz Haider

Barrister Ahsan's statement is clear on this: if parliament is the biggest hurdle in the way of pushing the military back and restoring constitutionalism (we are again assuming that restoration of judges automatically means that) then the very configuration of the polity is under question and challengeable

Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan, who is the thin end of the lawyers’ wedge, said a few days ago that parliament is the biggest hurdle in the way of the restoration of deposed judges. Since Ahsan himself has been a parliamentarian and is affiliated with the political party currently in power — let’s leave aside the issue of growing differences between him and the PPP — the statement is intriguing and needs to be deciphered.

Consider some benchmarks.

Theoretically, in a parliamentary system, the parliament is supreme. It can tell anyone, including the judiciary and the crown, to take it or lump it.

Democratic systems, even at a minimal level, require some procedure to determine the will of the people. This is generally done through elections, an exercise considered essential to a non-violent aggregation of interests.

Political dissent, in a democratic system, is channelled through various devices: protests, sit-ins, marches (long and short), lobbying, media campaigns, voting out or in a party et cetera.

The assumption is that dissent relates to issues that can be resolved and are not about the very fundamentals of a system. When fundamentals are challenged, dissent crosses the line and becomes a dispute. A dispute over fundamentals can shake the very legitimacy of a political configuration, the contract which underpins the existence of state and society.

Unlike dissent, whose expression in evolved polities is institutionalised, disputes are much more difficult to resolve. They betoken a polity still in search of a legal-normative framework. Such a polity may have the trappings of democracy, elections, parliament, judiciary etc, but it remains unbalanced in the absence of a legal-normative framework accepted by all the actors.

Two things can happen. Such a polity can either witness violence or lumber from one crisis to another.

Pakistan saw the first in the erstwhile East Pakistan in 1971 and, in a much lesser degree, in Balochistan; the second, a persistent problem, has manifested itself not just in and through cycles of military rule but also the inability of the civilian enclave to get its act together. The situation has acquired bidirectional causality now, each being both the cause and effect of the problem.

Given this, what are the necessary implications of what Barrister Ahsan has said?

Since the issue of transition and transformation has already been much debated, let me not take that route and stick with just the proposition that transformation indeed is the way forward. Broadly, transformationists argue that civilian supremacy can only be achieved by pushing the military back to the barracks in one go — not through smaller steps and pacts and intermittent stages, but “in one fell swoop”.

While it is highly debatable whether civilian supremacy in and of itself can take care of the structural problems that are responsible for the current state of affairs, being more a necessary though not sufficient condition for doing so, let’s assume that it can.

We now have the following proposition: if we can push the military back to the barracks, this will result in civilian supremacy which will then result in making us a viable polity.

Let’s now see what’s stopping us from transforming. One marker of establishing civilian supremacy is to push out General (retd) Pervez Musharraf. If we can get the judges restored who he threw out using his dictatorial powers, constitutionalism will have been established and with it would come civilian supremacy.

So far so good. The problem is that the will of the people is expressed in and through political parties. These parties, despite Mr Musharraf’s blueprint, went into elections and have been voted in. The party that got the most seats, which is also Barrister Ahsan’s party, wants to do two things: one, it looks at the restoration of judges as part of a broader constitutional package; two, it does not want to rock the boat at this stage as far as Mr Musharraf is concerned.

Indeed, the only party among those that contested the election and has thrown its full weight behind the lawyers’ movement is the PMLN. Let’s also assume that it is doing so for moral and constitutional reasons and its motives are not tainted by political expediency and the desire to ultimately upstage its chief rival and current senior coalition partner, the PPP.

We run into problems. This is not an issue of dissent. It is a dispute and simply because it relates to the fundamentals of the polity. Please note that here we are again assuming that the demand by the lawyers will actually result in the supremacy of the constitution, the strengthening of the institution of the judiciary and, consequently, undermine the position of the army. Further, we are assuming this despite the fact that the demand by lawyers is not aimed at the institution of the judiciary itself because it is minimalist (restore the judges) even as its expression is deterministic (I am thankful to Moeed Yusuf for this argument).

So, despite the minimalism of the issue, it is now expressing itself as a dispute and its premise challenges the current political configuration. If the PPP is seen as protecting the interests of Mr Musharraf — and by extension the army — then it is militating against the requirement of constitutionalism and thereby civilian supremacy. It belongs to the adversarial camp.

That granted, what does one do about the party having been voted in as the largest entity? Could it be that people voted it in because it would do what the lawyers — and presumably others too — want done: restore the judges? If yes, then it has gone against its mandate. Should we wait for another five years so people can vote it out?

Yes, if we consider the system legitimate. No, if we do not.

Barrister Ahsan’s statement is clear on this: if parliament is the biggest hurdle in the way of pushing the military back and restoring constitutionalism (we are again assuming that restoration of judges automatically means that) then the very configuration of the polity is under question and challengeable.

By extension also, what has happened is mere electoralism; it is neither democracy nor constitutionalism. And since Barrister Ahsan has mentioned “parliament”, not just the “PPP”, it is safe to assume that the entire House, with the possible exception of the PLMN, is part of ancien regime that must go.

What that means and what its implications are, we shall come to tomorrow.

Ejaz Haider is Consulting Editor of The Friday Times and Op-Ed Editor of Daily Times. He can be reached at sapper@dailytimes.com.pk

The wannabe heroes
By Ayesha Siddiqa

THE retired servicemen seem to have rebelled against President Musharraf calling for his impeachment and trial for planning the Kargil operation. In a press conference held on June 4, a group of retired servicemen demanded Gen Musharraf’s trial, restoration of judiciary, revision of the Kashmir policy and the revoking of the controversial NRO.

An important point raised during the meeting was to investigate the Kargil crisis which cost Pakistan a lot of money, precious lives and reputation.

While an audit of military operations by the government is certainly needed, the important question which must be asked is that is this press conference just a ‘rebellion’ of ‘civilianised’ army men against the former army chief in defence of democracy and higher political values in the country?

If at all, the ex-servicemen’s call for revamping Musharraf’s political and military legacy indicates a malaise within the political power structure, especially the deeper establishment. Broadly speaking, this indicates the problems which arise with the military’s long entrenchment in politics which is now working against the organisation’s much-flaunted ethos of unity of command.

But before we get into a systems analysis, lets look into the actors who are part of this ‘rebellion’ and whether it is true that they merely acted in defence of democracy and independence of judiciary. It is interesting to note that this club of ‘old soldiers’ struck at the time when Musharraf is engulfed with criticism from all sides.

Notwithstanding the importance of the movement for restoration of judiciary, the intent of the ex-servicemen, especially some of its members could be more than strengthening a civilian institution. So, the onlookers have to be careful in distinguishing between the need to investigate the Kargil crisis and the actual intent of people like Gen Jamsheed Gulzar Kiyani and others in telling the story now. The good general sat silent all these years enjoying his stint as head of Fauji Foundation’s company Marri Gas and then as the chairman of the Federal Public Services Commission. The question is that why didn’t he ask any question then?

One of the features of popular or semi-popular movements is that they throw up all sorts of personalities who join a political race for their own goals. In fact, the dialectics of the political movement of these ex-servicemen wannabe heroes denotes two interesting issues.

First, there is a rift within the deeper establishment and this group of ex-servicemen is just a glimpse of the internal friction. Contrary to the argument that these retired generals, brigadiers and colonels are innocent civilians, the fact of the matter is that they are part of the military fraternity which includes serving officers, retired officers and some civilians as well who are linked with or dependent upon the military’s power. The retired ones, hence, are as much part of the larger institutional politics as the serving officers. It was very clear from the press conference that the real issue was removing an individual than strengthening democratic institutions.

The retired officers defended the economic, political and social power of the armed forces and defended the organisation’s control of the state. They even mentioned the military’s right to ten per cent jobs as granted by the constitution which is an absolute fallacy. The ten per cent quota was granted by Gen Ziaul Haq and is mentioned in the Establishment code of the government and not in the constitution.

What makes the old officers’ attack against Musharraf significant, as mentioned earlier, is that these voices represent the friction within the deeper establishment that is the military. The retired officers serve the purpose of airing views that the serving cannot. While representing one view or the other, these officers represent differing points of views rather than an independent voice. So, while some would air the concerns of the pro-democracy lobby, others speak for the pro-US, pro-China or pro-Islamist views within the defence organisation. The reason that these voices have become louder now is because the friction has increased. Moreover, with the years of engagement in politics of the military what could one expect but for the noises to become more audible?

But why should these people be treated as informal spokespersons of the internal lobbies? This is because the military suffers from the lack of a strong institutional mechanism for internal dialogue. The Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, (JCSC) which was established during the 1970s to redress this very problem, came to nothing due to the army’s take over in 1977. Gen Sharif, who was the first chairman JCSC, was of the view that the Zia martial law killed the institution. Since then, the three services have used two mechanisms: (a) retired servicemen and (b) media to debate their interests and present their perception. The smaller services also have favourite journalists they can lobby to present their standpoint since they do not have any other option.

Then there is the problem at another level which is the services themselves where different groups and lobbies have to convince the higher command of their point of view. This is where the voices of the retired officers become part of the din. The Kargil crisis itself is an example of the absence of string internal mechanisms for debate and analysis. The retired Gen Kiyani says that even the ISI was not informed about the operation. However, the fact is that a major war-like operation was launched without sitting officers seriously objecting to it. Some will argue that the silence itself is a sign of professionalism. The officers are meant to obey the higher command and not present their views. In the post-colonial military tradition the command of the service chief cannot be challenged. Nonetheless, the officers, who in the past have challenged the higher command on moral grounds, were no less professional or officer-like than those who continued to obey questionable decisions. The three brigadiers who refused to fire on civilians in Lahore in 1977 were real officers.

This discussions, nevertheless, is not about what is a real officer but to make a simple point that the wannabe heroes amongst the retired officers do not necessarily represent an alternative. They have during the course of their careers been part of questionable decisions and it will be sad if they become heroes by aligning themselves with the lawyer’s movement. There should certainly be a trial for Kargil but for all the other sins as well which were committed by many in the course of the country’s history. What is even more important is creation of institutions within the state and the deeper establishment so that we can be saved from unwanted heroes. (Daily Dawn)

The writer is an independent strategic and political analyst.
ayesha.ibd@gmail.com

Pieces which don't fit
Islamabad diary

Friday, June 13, 2008
Ayaz Amir

We know what the lawyers' long march is for. It is for a noble cause with which few people in post-Feb 18 Pakistan will disagree: the restoration of the deposed judges, starting from My Lord Iftikhar Chaudhry and encompassing all the other judges who, showing courage and integrity, refused to take oath under President Musharraf's Provisional Constitutional Order (Nov 3, 2007).

So far so good. But who or what is the long march against? Who is its target, against whom or what this outpouring of passion and emotion, this vast expense of time and energy? It is at this point that the lines blur and confusion sets in.

Last year there was no such confusion. Right from March 9 when My Lord Chaudhry's departure from the bench was sought by Musharraf and a clutch of his generals, to Nov 3 when Musharraf, in the last throes of desperation, struck at the Constitution and imposed emergency rule, the target of the lawyer's movement could not have been clearer: it was Musharraf and his increasingly detested dispensation.

But things changed when emergency rule was revoked and elections were held in which the people rejected Musharraf and his works and reposed their trust in parties on the other side of the divide: the PPP which bagged the highest number of seats and the PML-N which was not far behind. The rules had changed and so had the ground reality. While Musharraf continued to be demonized---elements in the media still finding it hard to come out of this mode---the judges' issue was now not in Musharraf's lap but in parliament's. It was for parliament---or, more accurately, Asif Zardari, the real power behind the new PPP-led government---to take a decision about the judges: whether to restore them or how to restore them. Musharraf could nurse his likes and dislikes, and indeed his prejudices, but the decision on this contentious issue was no longer in his hands.

Now if Zardari is playing an elaborate game of bluff, and there's no doubt that he is, if he is not comfortable at the prospect of My Lord Chaudhry returning to the Supreme Court as an all-powerful chief justice, and if he is out to protect and preserve the incumbent chief justice, Justice Dogar, from whom he has received many a favour, he has his own reasons for doing so. And whether those reasons are pious or driven by less than the purest motives is beside the point. Of relevance to the long march is the circumstance that impeding the smooth, hassle-free restoration of the deposed judges is not beleaguered Musharraf but very much buoyant and perpetually-smiling---his wide grin beginning to grate on many nerves---Asif Zardari.

The National Assembly as a whole is guiltless in this respect because the parties represented in it act according to the good sense or the whims and prejudices of their respective leaders. I am sure there would be many members of the PPP parliamentary party who may not see eye to eye with Zardari as regards his all too clever stance on the judges' issue. But they wouldn't speak out because that is not the fashion in our parties. Indeed, anyone speaking out or showing himself a dissident would soon be out in the cold, having committed something close to political suicide. The same of course holds true for other parties.

The point of all this exegesis is that for the lawyers' long march to make sense it would have to be directed against the PPP government, especially its leadership as represented by Asif Zardari. But the leaders of the long march dare not train their guns openly at the PPP because that would split their movement. So they are speaking in a language which at best can be described as coded. They thunder against authoritarianism and say that their long march will lead to momentous consequences. But they are not able to say with much clarity as to what exactly they mean by authoritarianism in the present context or what precisely those consequences are likely to be.

This lack of clarity, or call it enforced prudence, already makes this march different from the lawyers' movement last year. Everything about the movement last year was spontaneous and true. About the only calculated element in it was Chaudhry Aitzaz Ahsan's driving, his Formula One formula being to arrive at a destination as late as possible. Workers of various parties also formed part of the movement but they did so out of conviction and not on orders from their party high commands. In any case, the leadership of both the major parties was outside the country. So whether for good or ill their influence on the movement was limited.

Because ground realities have changed and because on the judges' issue at least it is parliament which is the relevant body rather than the presidency, this long march has something forced and strained about it. So, not surprisingly, it has not triggered anything like a mass movement which alone, under the circumstances, could have caused the government to panic and led Zardari, the key man in this entire equation, to alter course and change his mind.

It is hard even to say whether the upfront involvement of some political parties in this affair is a good or bad thing. It might be good for the parties concerned in strengthening their democratic and pro-judiciary credentials but this upfront involvement also allows critics and detractors to suggest---even if the imputation is false---that the lawyers' movement is playing into political hands. My Lord Chaudhry has also come out in front during this march. Should he have done so? I personally think---and I could be wholly wrong---that maintaining some distance and cultivating a measure of silence would have served the purposes of the long march better. Familiarity may be a good thing but it can also breed indifference.

So my guess is that Zardari, his wide grin always at his service, will choose to ride out the mini-storm making its way to Islamabad. Indeed, signs suggest that the PPP leadership may try to smother the long march with kindness. Interior boss Herr Rehman Malik's container policy---a leaf out of the pages of the MQM: heavy containers deployed around the presidency and parliament to block the progress of the march---would have played right into the hands of the long-marchers and given their passion and fury something to strike at.

This policy thus was the best guarantee for the partial success of the long march. The containers would have been the barricades the long marchers would have charged. And if then the forces of law and order had responded with batons and teargas, the world's television cameras would have caught the burning images in their sights and the long march would have been able to claim some vindication for its efforts.

But second thoughts having prevailed, and I suspect Herr Malik having been overruled, the container policy has been reversed and although there will still be roadblocks and plenty of police and rangers, there is likely to be no attempt to completely block the marches, unless of course the marchers turn lucky and Herr Malik has his way again.

So the marchers, if the picture I am painting turns out to be correct, should be able to flow on to the Constitution Avenue, on which the principal buildings of state stand, there to stage a sit-in or hold a public meeting. I am dying to hear my friend Ali Ahmed Kurd, the pre-eminent orator of the lawyers' movement last year, once again. But what then? What happens after the speeches? Are we likely to see a prolonged sit-in in front of parliament?

That would be heady stuff but for any revolution---velvet, orange or Bolshevik---to get going, let alone succeed, you need three indispensable elements: teargas, the sound of occasional rifle fire and, behind the scenes, a Herr Rehman Malik pulling the strings. But I think the most fearsome thing we are likely to encounter is Zardari's flashing teeth, which should be enough to set teeth on edge and make any beer taste flat.

I'll of course be there on Constitution Avenue hobbling on my crutches---having stepped into a hole as deep and booby-trapped as the one the Islamic Republic seems to be permanently in---and there will be, I trust, a sufficiently impressive contingent from Chakwal to augment the strength of the long march.

But do I see My Lord Dogar taking to his heels from some back door of the Supreme Court, and My Lord Chaudhry being swept into the same portals by an unstoppable tide of revolutionary zeal? For this soul-stirring sight I think we shall have to wait some other day. (The News).


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Thursday, 12 June 2008

My choice today: Thursday 12 June 2008


Who's calling whose bluff? Musharraf or the APDM? Aftab Iqbal


Who is paving the road to another martial law in Pakistan? Hasan Nisar

I found Musharraf extremely confident and serene… Asadullah Ghalib

On Musharraf, In All Fairness: Ahmed Quraishi

I will vote anytime for a Pakistani leader who does not own a house and a list of bank accounts abroad. These days, only President Musharraf fits the bill. Pakistan is a resilient nation and it will survive with or without all those who are in power in Islamabad today, including the president. But here’s something that all Pakistanis should remember: Pakistan can live with an imperfect political system, but not a failed one. It just is not in our interest. And patriotic, nationalist Pakistanis will not let their nation go down. Period....

Read on....  
http://www.ahmedquraishi.com

Federal Budget 2008-09 - A perspective - Abdul Qadir Hasan


On the march — Sarah Humayun

Is it really in the interests of our elected representatives to stand by principle, even so compromised a principle as the restoration of a chief justice who originally rode on the back of a martial law?

I’ll admit frankly that I don’t know what to think of the lawyer’s long march. It was only last July that the Chief Justice was last reinstated. In the June that preceded that July, there seemed to be little doubt that the chief justice’s cause had justice on its side. Is there any now? Not really — but the long war of attrition fought on the chief justice’s behalf, and more recently by the gentleman himself, has imposed a new perspective.

Last June it was a story of one man’s defiance of a dictator. Seeking the connections of this narrative with what went before or what would come after was untimely. History was being made, as people noted, and true to type, history in the making seems to stand outside history. Now, once again, we are told that history is going to be made. But it doesn’t feel like that. There is now too much connection, too much context.

What is missing? Well, for one thing, a clear villain. There is a tacit understanding that President Musharraf is now not the main stumbling block in the movement’s way. Or let us put it another way: President Musharraf is now not the name of a man, but of an alignment of interests that would like to use him both as a punching bag and as the guarantor of an agreement. He is the name of a marriage of convenience, but he’s also black to everyone’s white. However, he is fast losing even his real, unconstitutional function as decoy. The lawyers’ want, this time, to take on Parliament.

Is Parliament their true opponent? I among others seek illumination on this point. One major chunk of Parliament, the PMLN, is squarely with them, marching against itself. Other elements in it are ambivalent. None is openly against them, not even the PPP, which has gone furthest in identifying itself with Musharraf.

However, barring PMLN, would its major players really want to see lawyers bring about an unequivocal restoration of CJ et al? This question, which peeped through even last year in complaints that political parties kept their distance from the lawyers and vice versa, robs the lawyer-democracy alliance of its romance.

Is it really in the interests of our elected representatives to stand by principle, even so compromised a principle as the restoration of a chief justice who originally rode on the back of a martial law? That is the question of the day.

Would they want to strengthen the hands of future justices against usurpation of power and constitutional infringement by the precedent of restoring the CJ? We look at the people who sit in Parliament, at their histories — distressingly mixed — and wonder.

It is the PMLN’s politics that seem puzzling in this context. It seems to have no vision of status quo in sight, though in the past the party has not flinched from physically assaulting the Supreme Court to maintain status quo. Are we witnessing recklessness for power here, or a change of heart?

Or should we marvel instead at the PPP’s politics? Is it missing the redundancy of its pragmatic, at best semi-legal compromises at a time when the voters have turned resolutely to issues? Will we finally have a PPP divested from romance?

If that happens, many will lament the symbol the PPP was in Pakistan politics — thwarted by the establishment, always a promise, never quite delivering the goods but with its heart in the right place. But perhaps others will be happier with a straighter look at the PPP. This may not mean that the PPP will lose voters, but that it may lose a type of voter.

It is difficult to have an opinion on all this, and I admire those who manage to do so. The lawyers’ cause seems the justest, most attractive of causes. But it has become synonymous with the reversal of the painstaking compromises reached since last year between a number of actors. Do we really need these compromises? Are they in the collective good or designed to serve narrow interests? Is the need for stability greater than the need for setting right a wrong? Will we build governance on sounder foundations if the chief justice is restored, or give the judiciary a tool to undermine governance?

The eye of the camera is too close to the action to enlighten much, and the eye of history too distant to be of help. I at least shall reserve judgement till events teach me better.

The writer is former Assistant Op-Ed Editor of Daily Times and loves to find affinities in objects where no brotherhood exists to common minds.

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Long march testing limits of political parties

Thursday, June 12, 2008
By Ansar Abbasi

ISLAMABAD: The lawyers' long march is a real test for political parties, the PML-N and the APDM, including the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Tehrik-e-Insaaf, which have been championing the cause of the judges' restoration but have not been impressive in their participation in Multan.

Their participation in the long march from Lahore would be a clear sign of their seriousness to the cause. If their present lukewarm participation, as witnessed in Multan on Wednesday, continues, it would damage these political parties besides hurting the cause of an independent judiciary. 

However, hats off to the lawyers fraternity for their steadfastness and struggle to change the destiny of this country by ensuring the rule of law and independence of the judiciary. The timely return of the PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif from London has boosted the morale of the party's hawkish leaders, who want 100 per cent participation of the PML-N in the long march but their voices were choked by the pragmatic influential leaders of the party. Upon his return from London on Wednesday morning, Nawaz Sharif called a meeting of his party's top ranks and file in Islamabad and decided to give the maximum possible of the PML-N to make the long march a real success. 

He announced that notwithstanding the security concerns, he would personally become a part of this unprecedented march, both in Lahore and Rawalpindi. He also directed all his MNAs and MPAs to bring five buses and three buses respectively full of PML-N activists to Rawalpindi on June 13 to march to Islamabad, along with the lawyers' long march. 

The PML-N chief is quoted by a source as telling his party leaders upon his arrival that the long march would be vital for the future of Pakistan and to realise the dream of an independent judiciary. However, the question remains: has the party now enough time to mobilise the masses to aggressively take part in the long march?

Multan is PPP-dominated but still has a considerable following of the PML-N with two MNAs and four MPAs. But hardly a few hundred of its activists joined the long march on Wednesday in the city of shrines.

The PML-N was expected to be an enthusiastic participant of the long march as it has 90 plus seats in the National Assembly. It got unprecedented votes on its election pledge to get the deposed judges' restored.

Here is a test in hand for the PML-N and its top leadership. The pro-Nov 3 judiciary political parties failed to meet the people's expectation on Wednesday in Multan. However, the coming days are really crucial not only for the long march and the cause of the independent judiciary but also for the future image of these political parties. 

Sources in the PML-N confided to this correspondent that the party had no wholehearted strategy to make the long march a success till the return of Nawaz Sharif on Wednesday morning. Contrary to the resolve shown by Nawaz Sharif, the party's preparation was really far less than public expectations.

A lot has been said during the recent days that the PML-N has held a series of meetings to ensure that the party fully participates in the long march. However, in reality there has been no such thing except the party's declaration that the lawyers' long march would be welcomed and seen off in different cities and towns.

The Jamaat-e-Islami too is not in its usual colour and was not impressive like the PML-N in Multan on Wednesday. The Jamaat is known for its street power and Lahore, being the headquarters of the JI, would be a test of the party's genuineness to the cause of the judges' restoration.

Qazi Hussain Ahmad is simply missing from the media at this crucial time and according to reports he would go to Peshawar to join the lawyersí long march on June 13. So far the Jamaat has also restricted itself to welcoming and farewell receptions of the lawyers' long march in different cities and towns.

Imran Khan, the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaaf chief, too has returned to Pakistan and is expected to make a public appearance in the lawyers' long march in Lahore on Thursday. Considering the size and age of his party, the PTI activists are seen everywhere but Imran Khan's personal participation in the long march would help attract the crowd. However, it is not yet clear if he would prefer to march along the lawyers' or would join them in Islamabad. (The News)


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Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Imran Khan maltreated by Jamaat-e-Islami supporters in Punjab University


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Imran Khan maltreated by Jamaat-e-Islami supporters in Punjab University


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The Long March fiasco: The Jamiat guys beat up the SAC students in Lahore

It seems that the cats are fighting over the piece of cheese (as if there was a piece of cheese in the first place). I have heard that 'Momin aik sorakh say do bar nahe dasa jata'. Someone rush and convey this hadith to Imran Khan.

Here is the news link:

http://fastrising.blogspot.com/2008/06/is-there-no-shame-in-these-people.html

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Is there no shame in these people?

Young men claiming to be members of the Islami Jamiat-e-Tulaba (aka IJT, aka "the Jamiat", the student wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami) disrupted the SAC Long March mobilisation camp at Nasir Bagh around 2:00 PM today.

They claimed that no one except the Jamiat had the right to organise any activity in that area and that the SAC members should wind up the camp within 10 minutes. The SAC members, heavily outnumbered, decided to negotiate for time and it was agreed that they would wind up the camp by 3:30 PM.

As the negotiations were ending, two SAC members arrived on the scene. One of them, Ahmed Saleemi, started filming the negotiation process and the activities of the aggressors. One of the saboteurs took offence at being filmed and angrily ordered Ahmed to stop filming and tried to grab his phone. Ahmed resisted, there was a scuffle in which Ahmed, outnumbered, was beaten up. The SAC members (one of whom was a female student from LUMS) managed to disentagle themselves and escape in one of their cars. They made rescue calls and messaged their friends, as a result of which backup started arriving.

By the time members from various activist groups (SAC, FASTRising, YPL, CMKP, lawyers) as well as the Jamaat coordinator and the Police converged on the scene, the aggressors had cleared out leaving behind the havoc they had wrought. Ale Natiq reports that when he was trying to respond to the panic calls by the SAC members, he was stopped by some of the same aggressors: "I just tried to visit the camp where the IJT guys stopped me on the way just a few meters away from the camp seeing the posters and stickers on my car and forced me to move away." 

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unquote
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My choice today: Wednesday 11 June 2008


Long March, Zardari and Musharraf – Aftab Iqbal


PPP lawyers and the Long March

According to reports, lawyers belonging to the PPP in Lahore have a split opinion on whether to join the Long March in favour of the restoration of the judges and against President Musharraf. Two groups within the People’s Lawyers Forum think differently: one group, while demanding restoration of the judges, thinks that taking part in the Long March would destabilise the PPP government. The other group wants to go all the way. The lawyers’ movement is popular and there are moral and physical persuaders behind it.

According to one report, Lahore’s courts are dysfunctional these days because the lawyers are absent. There are 50,000 cases lying before the judges with no defence in sight, which affects both the civil litigant and those rotting in prisons without guilt. In Punjab and the rest of the country the number of cases thus blocked would amount to complete breakdown of the process of justice in the country. One can only hope that the lawyers’ movement will take a decision in this matter and allow the courts to function on all days except perhaps on Thursday when it stages its weekly protest. Such a plea is made because the lawyers are given to making threats against those of their community who persist in attending the courts. Like the breakaway PPP lawyers, everyone in the profession should have the right to decide whether he wants to join the protest or not. (Daily Times).
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Zardari’s choice: Power or PML-N? by Majid Shah

MAJID SHAH

Tuesday, 10 June 2008.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Wrong assessments lead to wrong conclusions. Our politicians are quite prone to making wrong assessments about undercurrents of the Establishment and world support.

Twice the PPP lost governments because of these wrong assessments. Nawaz Sharif made similar mistakes.

This time, it is up to the PPP to decide whether both PPP and PML-N will repeat the mistake for the third time or the PML-N will make it alone.

Next few days are very important. Things are quite apparent. Legally and constitutionally, neither President Pervez Musharraf can be removed nor can the deposed judges be restored.

Any misadventure on part of political parties will play havoc with future of democracy in Pakistan. Armed Forces will abide by the dictate of the constitution and any violation will be strongly resisted.

Nawaz League government in Punjab has adopted a policy of confrontation since the inception. Constitutional obligations are flouted openly. Agitation and moves to destabilize the federation are being patronized openly and covertly. Attempts are being made to settle the matters on the streets by showing disregard to the constitutionally available means.

After open support and patronage to Long March by lawyers and the announcement by Nawaz Sharif that he would also travel in the bus to Islamabad, only two options are left with PPP government: Accept ‘Governor Rule’ in Punjab and save the whole system or sacrifice the whole system, have another Martial Law unlike previous Martial Laws. We hope better sense prevails and democracy flourishes in Pakistan.

Mr. Shah is a Pakistani commentator. The views expressed here are his own. He can be reached at majidshah1978@gmail.com    

WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM
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Tuesday, 10 June 2008

The Long March or The Short March?

The reality of the Long March:

According to an anlysis by Ambar Khairi on BBC Urdu,
the Long March is a fraud with the people of Pakistan who are being fooled by the greedy media (e.g. Geo, ARY, Aaj, Express News), opportunist politicians (e.g. Qazi Hussain Ahmed, Imran Khan), shameless retired Generals (e.g. Hameed Gul, Aslam Beg), and confused lawyers cum politicians (e.g. Aitzaz Ahsan).

Also read the following column (Daily News):

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Good afternoon Punjab!

Wednesday, June 11, 2008
By Jamal Khurshid

Karachi

The road-weary Karachi caravan arrived in Sukkur well past 1 a.m. to a rousing reception and was soon joined by a caravan from Balochistan, led by Ali Ahmed Kurd. The total number of people at Sukkur, after the buoyant amalgamation of the two caravans, rose approximately 5,000 (maybe even 6,000 people). Around 2,000 of these were lawyers. The remaining were political, NGO and civil society activists....

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Pakistan’s disintegrating national unity

ZAID HAMID

We are not comfortable with the direction of events. The President is in a crisis fighting for his survival; former Chief Justice wants his job back and is willing to get political to any limit irrespective of what it does to the country. The chairman of the ruling party is busy cleaning his criminal history and selling his soul to the Americans and the main party in Punjab wants nothing less than scalp of the President. The sub-nationalists in NWFP, Balochistan and Sindh are already on board with the Americans/Indians/Afghans, lawyers are grinding their own axe at the cost of national confusion, Prime Minister is lost and confused, and the media is out of control and sold out to the highest bidders. The U.S. now has all its assets in place and the game would be unfolding rapidly in near future.

.......

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Every week, it goes from bad to worse in terms of political confusion and chaos. It is quite clear none of the stakeholders in power in Islamabad is sane or sincere to resolve any crisis for the country. It is a cut-throat battle for survival, settling of blood feuds, grabbing power, preservation of petty self interest and outright treachery and betrayals of the country and the nation.

While the federal government remains confused and directionless, lawyers, sub-nationalist separatists and religious radicals all continue to exploit the weak federal government and its lack of national unity to enhance their vested agendas.

We are going to be pretty harsh this week and, in our honest assessment, lawyers are no different from BLA or Baitullah when it comes to increasing national divisions and disintegrating national unity. The leadership of the lawyers is playing its own game which is definitely not in the national interest. They are now also going in tangent with the PPP led government well charting their own course in the confused political landscape.

Before we do our analysis for the week, we would like to refresh what we wrote last week.

We had written:

“Things are not good as the political confusion can’t last very long as it is. It is all Wild West in Islamabad right now. While the army watches and waits on the wings, the political parties are hammering it out within themselves with lawyers and former Chief Justice remaining defiant in their bravado. The most vulnerable man remains in the Presidency but he intends to hold on for now. The game Zardari is playing is dangerous and can lead to much unexpected and even tragic results. So while everyone in the mainstream continues to fight and bicker over nonissues, the subnationalists in Sindh and NWFP are joining hands, again in a remarkable display of United States’ ability to bring together foes within the Pakistani politics. In the past, we have extensively written about this U.S. grand strategic objective within Pakistani politics.

U.S. is too desperate to create a larger separate Pashtun region based on ethnic lines as envisioned in the greater Middle East plan for Pakistan. The summer season is on and power demand is putting backbreaking pressure on the system which is at best able to cope with only 70% of the demand. With fuel high, food scarce and no power, it is going to be a very long hot summer for the government as well which is now struggling to bring in a budget within the next few days. The next few weeks would decide the fate of this experiment of democracy in the country.”

President Musharraf is now fighting for his survival and his only strength is the division within the ranks of his opponents. He has been pushed to the wall and now has no other option but to bite back and defend his weak position from his crumbling fortress. He is managing to hold on, not because of the strength of his moral or political authority but simply because the government, its coalition partners and the opposition are too bitterly divided to cause any immediate collapse of the Presidency.

But his self defense did not make his job any easier nor brought him allies or friends. It is now clear that both PPP and PML(N) want to remove him but while Zardari wants a guarantee that the actions of the President in which he gave a blanket pardon to the PPP chairperson would not be nullified or challenged after his ouster, Nawaz Sharif has a different and rather harsh take on the subject. The NS line of thinking is creating troubles for Zardari as well, hence the delay in the package which is supposed to be brought to the parliament for deciding the fate of the President and the future of the country’s politics. If Zardari did not have skeletons in his closet and he was not a man threatened with corruption cases, Mr. Musharraf would have been out of the Presidency by now. His corruption has now become the biggest asset for President Musharraf! What an irony!

Musharraf is all alone now and even his staunchest allies and protégés are not with him, including Shaukat Aziz who has now conveniently escaped the crisis at home and has words of wisdom to offer to the world media over the political scenario in the country. Shaukat gets his feedback from the very players who are orchestrating this crisis in the country and is foreseeing a ‘threat’ of Nawaz Sharif coming to power if the present game continues to unfold and Musharraf loses face, office and power in the country.

the ex-servicemen

But the biggest dent to President Musharraf’s image and credibility came from his own clan when the ex-servicemen society decided to come out on the streets against him. Right now we are not very sure about the motives of the ex-servicemen.

They are either being very stupid, or being very ambitious or have gone over board in anger or some of them have been bought out and are externally funded just as lawyers’ movement is to increase the chaos and crisis on the streets and in politics. Statements of a retired General Kiyani who was a close confidant of Musharraf just a few years back have raised eyebrows even within the armed forces where the whole institution has been dragged into the controversy.

This is an unprecedented development in Pakistani history where brotherhood or arms had always remained stronger than personal grudges. The armed forces in this country are the symbol of federation and now they are under increasing spotlight of criticism and scrutiny due to the recklessness of Musharraf and the sense of revenge and anger of his opponents both within the ranks of former soldiers and political opponents.

The lawyers attitude and the behavior of Aitzaz Ahsan is even creating serious embarrassment for his parent party PPP whose government he is trying to topple by his adventurism over judges issue. It is obvious that what Aitzaz is doing is not appreciated by PPP or Zardari but since the lawyers have also strong backers and perhaps the same people, there is not much that PPP or Zardari can do to make Aitzaz change his mind.

the pml-n and ppp

Similarly, there is nothing in common between PPP and PML (N) except the person of President Musharraf whom they both want ousted from the President house. The policy, strategy and the long term goals of both these parties collide head-on. For a starter, the issue of Kalabagh dam has emerged as the main cause of disagreement. With Shahbaz Sharif now the CM of Punjab and water being the biggest issue on the table, the unilateral cancellation of KBD project and Indian attempts to block Pakistani waters as well as weak stance of PPP government on Indian attempts is going to create even more serious friction between both PPP and PML (N). If Musharraf issue is gone, both these parties will be at each others throats. Shaukat Aziz is right here for a change.

a pakistani neocon in washington

At the international level, the neo-cons have their man in Pakistani embassy in Washington, finally. Mr. Hussein Haqqani is as good as President Bush himself deciding about Pakistan’s national security and foreign policy. The iron grip of CIA is preparing Pakistan for another Yugoslav type balkanization or Mussadeq style coup in Islamabad. All the key assets have been placed now and the game is going to unfold or (collapse) rapidly from now on.

We are not very comfortable with the direction of events. In fact, we are concerned now. The President is in a crisis fighting for his survival, former Chief Justice wants his job back and is willing to get political to any limit irrespective of what he does to the country in the process, chairman of the ruling party is busy cleaning his past crime history and selling his soul to the Americans in the process, main party in Punjab wants nothing less than scalp of the President, sub-nationalists in NWFP, Balochistan and Sindh are already on board with

Americans / Indians /Afghans, lawyers are grinding their own axe at the cost of national confusion, Prime Minister is lost and confused, food, power and fuel crisis is multiplied with water shortages for next food crops, media is out of control and sold out to highest bidders both national and international and religious militants are taking advantage of inner weaknesses of the federal government to deceive them into “peace deals” which they flout and break routinely by attacking with impunity all across the country from tribal regions to the Federal Capital. The U.S. now has all its assets in place and the game would be unfolding rapidly in near future.

Army is watching these developments from the wings.

This country needs a strong federal government immediately. This circus is not going to go on for a very long period of time. Though we do not see any threat or risk to the geographical boundary of the country, still it is going to be a long hot summer.

This column is extracted from a situation report released by BRASSTACKS, a security and defense analysis think tank based in Islamabad. Mr. Zaid Hamid is its Founding Consultant. He can be reached at info@brasstacks.biz
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My choice today: Tuesday 10 June 2008 - Nawaz Sharif, Niaz A. Naik and General Karamat; Lawyers Movement and Posturing; Islam and Unity



Niaz A Naik, Jahangir Karamat and Nawaz Sharif


Warna bardasht kar - Wusatullah Khan

Musharraf and reconciliation - Asadullah Ghalib

Enough of posturing

TRUE, posturing is an essential element of statecraft but our politicians need to be reminded that it is now getting on people’s nerves. In fact, one wonders whether the overdose of political rhetoric is meant to serve as a smokescreen for the failure to draw up pragmatic policies that could give some relief to the people. Four months after the euphoric Feb 19 morning, the national scene remains dangerously chaotic. The victors, it seems, had not done any homework. Confrontation is in the air, the principal players seem to be re-enacting the post-Zia anarchy of the ’90s, and there is no evidence that any side is willing to compromise for the greater good of the nation and end the sense of crisis. Yesterday, the lawyers began their ‘march’ from Karachi to Rawalpindi to achieve two objectives — to have Iftikhar Chaudhry reinstated and to get President Pervez Musharraf to vacate the Army House. There is already a split among their ranks, and the PPP lawyers’ wing and those in the MQM camp have boycotted the ‘march’. Besides, it is not clear how a ‘march’ can achieve these objectives, given the fact that the differences between the PPP and the PML-N have become obvious. Barring an agreement between the two major parties, the issue is unlikely to be settled politically in the near future, and that means that one can expect more confrontation which in our part of the world could lead to tear-gassing, baton charges, demonstrators being dragged and hauled into police vans, and the media having a field day. In brief, no respite from the crisis, while food prices soar.

The big question is: who is responsible for perpetuating this crisis? If President Pervez Musharraf is doing what he has been accused of doing — conspiring against a system he himself fathered — what stops the anti-Musharraf forces which control parliament to throw him out by legal and constitutional means? The truth is that the change in the PPP’s stance on the judges has added to the political confusion. Either it should not have committed to Iftikhar Chaudhry’s reinstatement, or if it did, as indeed it did at Bhurban, it should have honoured its commitment. Let down, the PML-N seems determined to pursue this goal in a scenario in which the odds seem pitted against it. The ultimate casualty is the people’s hopes — the people, who want no more than the right to live and have at least one square meal a day.

The PPP and PML-N today are in the corridors of power because of the people’s vote. Would they care to rise above partisan considerations and do something for the people’s good? The true indication of their concern, or lack of it, for their voters will be the budget. Will it be people-friendly? (Dawn)

Handouts: keep your fingers crossed!

As recommended by a group of eminent economists, the government is getting ready to arrange direct payment of cash subsidy to the poorest segment of the population in the coming budget. According to reports, the government may be targeting over 5 million people. As Mr Asif Ali Zardari has said, the handouts may be Rs1000 to Rs1500 per person. The handouts will be monthly, for a period of 12 months initially. The total dent in the budget may be around Rs 60 billion.

The list of over five million people is reportedly being compiled from various sources such as baitul maal. This would amount to a final admission that the so-called divine system of zakat has failed to deliver, after which the government would be justified in scrapping the 30,000 zakat committees run on zakat funds and ploughing into the subsidy the billions accumulated in the national zakat fund. If poverty is the yardstick then the NWFP comes first as deserving of handouts, followed by Balochistan and Sindh. Punjab, according to statistics, is not poverty-stricken compared to the other three. This will alleviate the hardship after the government passes on the real prices of wheat, oil and electricity to the consumers. In fact the government might then discover that the poor clamouring for handouts are far more than just 5 million. And if the handouts go haywire, it would be a double whammy for the poor in Pakistan. (Daily Times)

Divided we fall

THOUGH nothing novel in idea or spirit, the three-day congregation of Muslim leaders and thinkers from around the world in Makkah has to be appreciated for what it was: an attempt to achieve some level of intra-religious harmony before reaching out for full-scale inter-faith interaction. The Muslim-kill-Muslim violence has for long kept the community divided, earning not just a bad name for the faithful both in historical and contemporary terms but also allowing others to play on such fissures. Saudi Arabia, indeed, has the spiritual leadership in the Islamic world and the economic clout to raise the right kind of questions and help change the mindset of lay Muslims who form close to 20 per cent of the global population. To his credit, King Abdullah, since he took over in August 2005, has taken some meaningful steps in that direction. On the inter-faith front, he broke fresh ground by meeting Pope Benedict at the Vatican. Besides, he took part in a US-hosted gathering in Annapolis where an Israeli delegation was also in attendance. On the other hand, to heal wounds within the Muslim community, he has been quietly trying to engender less adversarial ties with Iran, advocating a balanced approach with the West. As a confirmation of his reconciliatory approach, the king also invited Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to last year’s annual pilgrimage, which was the first such invitation to an Iranian president.

The presence of former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani at the recent Makkah gathering — again a brainchild of the king — was yet another indication of the thaw between the two nations. When the two entered the venue together, it was more than mere symbolism; it was a message to the world that despite differences the Muslim world was united on most issues confronting it. And it was Mr Rafsanjani’s call that echoed in the final communiqué which urged various groups and schools of thought within Islam to close ranks and achieve unity while attempting to understand other religions and cultures and to strive for a peaceful coexistence with others. The world today is a troubled place, much more complex than during the bipolar existence of the Cold War era. Like it or not, the fact remains that the fault line today runs across religious lines. Any chance for Muslims to have a real say in world affairs is based on their ability to put up a united face. The age-old maxim of ‘divided we fall’ was never truer. (Dawn)
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Monday, 9 June 2008

My choice today: Monday 9 June 2008


Islam and modernism




Musharraf - Munno Bhai

Zardari and Shahbaz - Aftab Iqbal

Musharraf’s fading oracle

The media has pretended surprise over President Pervez Musharraf’s assertion Saturday that he would quit only as envisaged in the Constitution and not in any other way — meaning he won’t be hounded out by threats and protests. This media “surprise” follows the propagation of the subjective idea that somehow it is time “legally” for him to go whereas legality has nothing to do with the media’s desire. And the truth is that President Musharraf has never given the impression that he is vulnerable to the pressure of negative atmospherics in vogue today. But in the final analysis, we all think that, “morally”, he should quit now rather than later. As for his taking the legal route, the PPP has responded by saying that parliament has the capacity to make him go away if he does not resign. That, of course, is exactly his own point.

Unfortunately, Mr Musharraf’s speech was treated as “hostile” in advance, a manifestation of passion over rationality. One TV channel brought General (Retd) Hameed Gul and his “American conspiracy” spiel to put Mr Musharraf in his place. Another channel arranged a chat in which the anchor kept insisting that Mr Musharraf was predicting doom for the country, which was an exaggerated assessment and made Mr Musharraf seem indispensable. Everyone agreed, however, that he was not about to use Article 58(2)(b) to overthrow the current parliament and re-impose something or the other which the anchor did not specify.

A lot of people are understandably angry that he is still around; and there are others who, on cool calculation, also think that he should go away. On the face of it, it seems as if the two groups are close in their positions. But, in fact the two could be quite hostile to each other and may represent the growing post-Musharraf polarity in Pakistan. The group that relies on the concept of “the mandate” as a “legal” device to oust him also inclines to the view that he should be held accountable for his deeds or tried for treason which means he could be hanged. But the group that thinks he should bow out is not in favour of any process that looks like accountability since in Pakistan this has never looked like anything more than revenge and victimisation.

By and large, there was nothing explosive about Mr Musharraf’s media interaction. It was carefully worded; it even contained an admission of mistakes. It warned against division in the ranks of the coalition and predicted chaos if that snowballed into confrontation. Mr Musharraf made some clever points, which was his right. He nailed the PPP government on burying the Kalabagh Dam because he thought it would sell nicely in Punjab and among the Punjabi-dominated media, but the media blithely ignored it since it is determined to get rid of him by hook or by crook. He trundled off all the energy projects he had got going, even those which his PMLQ buddies cannot count in their defence. But that doesn’t matter in the charged environment of today.

The media presumes that its interpretation of the electoral mandate of 2008 is immaculate. And this was repeated in the face of Mr Musharraf’s factual claim that the grand alliance supporting him had bagged more votes (not seats) than anyone else, and that the single PMLQ vote was only second to that of the PPP (and more than that of the PMLN). But of course facts can’t stand up and be recounted at the altar of passion and anger. Indeed, the channels have spread as gospel the view that the elections have decreed Mr Musharraf’s resignation even through there is no constitutional provision defining either the mandate or a presidential resignation on hearing that his party has failed to win. The only legal point against him is the wrong method of getting himself re-elected in 2007. But then everyone plumped for taking part in the elections after that and rejected the APDM’s call to abstain and thus withhold legality to his action, didn’t they?

The less said the better about the retired army officers’ society that is trying to scalp him. They are a shameless lot. And he took the high moral ground when he scaled them down a peg without going into the sordid details about their personal and professional omissions and commissions in the past. Unfortunately, the case of Dr AQ Khan remains in incubation, waiting to explode and hurt not just Mr Musharraf but the Pakistani state. The cultivated ambiguity about him in the state is that he is a “national hero” who had to stay under house arrest. But in politics such untenable statements cannot stand up for long. Dr Khan is known all over the world for his “network”. In fact, the people who bought his stuff, or had a contract with him, have spoken out. The state has to keep him in low profile because his “outing” can compel the IAEA to report the matter to the UN Security Council, and the Council will then have to impose sanctions on Pakistan. Ironically, however, Dr Khan is a candidate for the very job that Mr Musharraf is supposed to leave! That tells you how self-righteous passion is hurting us as a nation-state. In fact, the nation, distracted by the judges’ case, has yet to concentrate its mind on the threat to the state brewing in the Tribal Areas and Balochistan.

If one looks at the vengeful views expressed in the media, the political calculus goes against President Musharraf. That is why we recommend that he decide to quit now rather than risk impeachment later on when the parliamentary numbers are against him. Unfortunately, the case-history of antagonism among his opposition — read PMLN and PPP — is so strong that he may be deluded into holding on for some time longer. (Daily Times)

Sabotaged by hawks

THE PPP-led government ought to take notice of the revelation made by Mushahid Hussain Syed in the Senate on Friday. Speaking after Senator Sanaullah Baloch resigned his Senate seat, the PML-Q secretary general said that hawks in the military establishment had sabotaged the two parliamentary committees’ reports which had made valuable suggestions to the government for a peaceful solution to the crisis in Balochistan. Mushahid Hussain knows. He is an insider, for he headed one of the two parliamentary committees which were charged with the task of investigating the causes of insurgency in what is the country’s largest province territorially, an